B1138 - Genetic liability for bullying victimisation A exploratory/GWAS study - 28/03/2011
Bullying refers to repeated and prolonged aggressive behaviours that are intentionally targeted
towards one or more weaker individuals. Victims may be persecuted through direct physical violence or
through indirectly harming social relationships. The prevalence of victimisation of children ranges from
approx. 10-25% across European countries. Victimisation is a powerful environmental stressor and adversely
related to concurrent children's well-being and mental health. Individual factors related to increased risk for
victimisation, however, are poorly understood: prospective studies are still rare and the mechanisms of how
genetic and family factors predict peer victimisation, and how victimisation relates to serious mental health
problems, are poorly studied.
It is proposed to investigate how family factors contribute to the development of bullying
victimisation in childhood and how environmental exposure to victimisation leads to common and severe
mental health problems in adolescence and early adulthood. The aetiology will be studied in four established
longitudinal cohort or panel studies in the UK and Germany. Study of the potential precursors of bullying
and mechanisms leading to serious mental health outcomes will include assessment of environmental and
genetic factors and experimental studies of bias in cognitive processing and effects on brain activation. The
study is highly cost-effective, utilising existing datasets, and ground-breaking in so far as it tests suspected
mechanisms in controlled studies. Understanding of the factors in families that increase the risk of
victimisation and their consequences will help to develop early interventions. Identification of malleable
environmental mechanisms will enable educators and clinicians to promote resilience and reduce the risk of
vulnerable children developing disabling and potentially life-long mental health problems. Ultimately, this
project intends to improve well-being across the life-span.