“…Enduring factors are usually stable over time, including personal characteristics (e.g., demographic factors, socioeconomic status, history of bullying) (Jain et al, 2020;Lee et al, 2022;Shin & Choi, 2021;Trompeter et al, 2022), cultural factors and individual consciousness (e.g., Confucian responsibility thinking, awareness of cyberbullying) (Wang et al, 2022;. Transient factors are fluctuating conditions that may be affected by the pandemic, including cyber factors (e.g., online activities) (Ikeda et al, 2022;Jain et al, 2020;Maftei et al, 2022;Paek et al, 2022), mesosystems (e.g., family support, school engagement) (Rodriguez-Rivas et al, 2022;Shin & Choi, 2021), and virus-related stressors (e.g., COVID-19 infection) (Barlett, Rinker, et al, 2021;Teng et al, 2021). Among the above factors, more internet use, and some personal characteristics such as history of bullying were common risk factors for cyberbullying victimization and perpetration (Lee et al, 2022;Jain et al, 2020;Shin & Choi, 2021;Vejmelka & Matković, 2021).…”