Feel good, do good online? Spillover and crossover effects of happiness on adolescents’ online prosocial behavior

Sara Erreygers*, Heidi Vandebosch, Ivana Vranjes, Elfi Baillien, Hans De Witte

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

51 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Although the majority of research on adolescents’ online behavior has focused on antisocial behavior such as cyberbullying, adolescents more often behave prosocially than antisocially online. Research on offline prosocial behavior has shown that happiness and prosocial behavior are related. Furthermore, spillover-crossover research suggests that emotional states originating in one context can spill over to another context and can even cross over from one person to another. Therefore, this study examined whether happiness is also related to adolescents’ online prosocial behavior and whether others’ (in this case, parents’) happiness also indirectly, via transmission to adolescents’ own happiness, predicts adolescents’ online prosocial behavior. Via a daily diary method, the associations of adolescents’ own happiness and their parents’ happiness with adolescents’ online prosocial behavior were tested on a daily level. The findings suggest that, on a daily level, happiness creates a ripple effect whereby adolescents and parents take their positive emotional states from school and work home, and adolescents act on their happiness by behaving more prosocially online. The strongest spillover and crossover effects were found for girls and their mothers, evoking questions for future research to understand these gender differences.
Original languageEnglish
Peer-reviewed scientific journalJournal of Happiness Studies : An Interdisciplinary Forum on Subjective Well-Being
Volume20
Pages (from-to)1241-1258
ISSN1389-4978
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15.06.2018
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article - refereed

Keywords

  • 512 Business and Management
  • happiness
  • online prosocial behavior
  • spillover
  • crossover
  • adolescents
  • parents

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