The recent study by
Among the 313 respondents from the US and India, more than half said they often do cyberbullying while only 6 per cent said they had never committed cyberbullying.
Educated and married people, irrespective of their gender, were most likely to commit cyberbullying more frequently, but demographics were not the only factors at play, according to the research.
Published in the
It also highlighted two of the most prevalent characteristics of a cyberbully -- higher education and psychopathy.
Lead researcher Dr
"We found less agreeable educated married males with high psychopathy and sadism are most susceptible to committing cyberbullying.
"Alternatively, a less-educated introvert female with high emotional stability and low psychopathy is less-likely to engage in cyberbullying," Hossain said.
However, he added that cyberbullies "possess a unique combination of characteristics that do not work in isolation".
The study indicated that people's online behaviour from the two countries were similar.
"The research focused on two social media platforms, Facebook and YouTube, and found the distribution of those committing cyberbullying was consistent between the US and Indian sample, and between Facebook and YouTube users," said Hossain.
He told
To prevent this toxic online behaviour, the study suggested that a combination of personality and demographic factors should be considered in designing actionable and proactive policymaking to address the challenge of cyberbullying.
It added that while designing programs to reduce cyberbullying, more attention needs to be given to the users with certain combinations of characteristics.
SEE ALSO: