ISSN 0439-755X
CN 11-1911/B

Acta Psychologica Sinica ›› 2025, Vol. 57 ›› Issue (6): 1056-1069.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1041.2025.1056

• Reports of Empirical Studies • Previous Articles     Next Articles

The joint role of childhood emotional abuse and bullying victimization in the development of adolescent depressive symptoms: Sequential mediation or enhanced moderation?

LI Xi1, ZHANG Chang1, YU Ruize1, YIN Yijia1, ZHOU Tong1, LIU Wei1,2(), CHEN Ning1,2()   

  1. 1School of Psychology, Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai 200234, China
    2Lab for Educational Big Data and Policymaking, Ministry of Education, Shanghai Normal University, Shanghai 200234, China
  • Published:2025-06-25 Online:2025-04-15
  • Contact: Wei Liu, E-mail: liuwei@shnu.edu.cn; Ning Chen, E-mail: chenning@shnu.edu.cn

Abstract:

To examine the longitudinal joint role of two types of interpersonal risk factors (childhood emotional abuse and adolescent bullying victimization) in the development of adolescents' depressive symptoms, 521 middle school students were followed up for 2 years and 3 rounds. The results of the analysis based on the latent growth curve model and its variants showed that: (1) both childhood emotional abuse and adolescent bullying victimization significantly and positively predicted adolescents' depressive symptoms in terms of initial intercept and growth slope; (2) the initial intercept and growth slope of bullying victimization mediated the prediction of adolescents' depressive symptoms by childhood emotional abuse; and (3) with respect to the initial intercept, bullying victimization weakened the prediction of adolescents' depressive symptoms by childhood emotional abuse; and (4) in terms of initial intercept, bullying victimization weakened the prediction of adolescents' depressive symptoms. Childhood emotional abuse weakened the positive predictive effect of bullying victimization on depressive symptoms, but there was no significant moderating effect on the growth slope. These results suggest that childhood emotional abuse and adolescent bullying victimization not only independently predicted the development of depressive symptoms in adolescents, but also played a joint role, which was mainly manifested in a longitudinal sequential mediation model (rather than an enhanced moderation model). Based on this conclusion, this paper integrates the interpersonal risk model of depression with the cumulative risk model to form the cumulative interpersonal risk model, and identifies the longitudinal pattern of interpersonal risk factors across developmental stages and relational systems as sequential mediators of depression in adolescents.

Key words: Childhood emotional abuse, Bullying victimization, Depressive symptoms, Cumulative interpersonal risk model, Sequential mediation model