2019
DOI: 10.23923/rpye2019.01.168
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Patrón de uso de internet y control parental de redes sociales como predictor de sexting en adolescentes: una perspectiva de género

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Cited by 19 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Previous studies have found parental behavioral control to be positively related to self-control in their children (Li et al, 2015) and therefore negatively related to impulsivity. One possible explanation for that is that parental restrictions and monitoring may increase their children’s awareness of appropriate behavior, which may contribute to them learning to control their own behavior (Villanueva and Serrano, 2019). In our study, however, parental control was positively related to impulsivity in adolescent children, and thus with antisocial behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous studies have found parental behavioral control to be positively related to self-control in their children (Li et al, 2015) and therefore negatively related to impulsivity. One possible explanation for that is that parental restrictions and monitoring may increase their children’s awareness of appropriate behavior, which may contribute to them learning to control their own behavior (Villanueva and Serrano, 2019). In our study, however, parental control was positively related to impulsivity in adolescent children, and thus with antisocial behavior.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is an objective fact that young people today spend a large part of their free time in activities related to social networks, mainly using mobile phones and the Internet [ 1 ]. This has meant a radical change in the way interpersonal relationships are maintained [ 2 ], even generating a new lifestyle for the youngest [ 3 ]. In this sense, it has been empirically confirmed that, on many occasions, the new technologies are not used safely, which has favoured the appearance of unfavourable behaviour [ 4 ], among which cyberbullying stands out [ 5 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One intermediate variable that seems important, according to previous research, is adolescents engaging in high-risk behavior on the internet. Some studies indicate that parental control could be a protective factor for high-risk behavior, such as intensive internet use (Chen and Chng, 2016; Gómez et al, 2017; Villanueva-Blasco and Serrano-Bernal, 2019), having Internet access in the bedroom (Khurana et al, 2015), or disclosing personal information (Liu et al, 2013). Other studies show that engaging in these high-risk behaviors on the internet increases the likelihood of becoming a victim of cyber-aggression (Helweg-Larsen et al, 2012; Sasson and Mesch, 2014) such that parental control would be expected to be a protective factor for cyber-victimization through its protective effect on high-risk internet behavior.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%