A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Why Students Higher in Callous-Unemotional Traits Are More Resistant to Targeted Anti-Bullying Interventions by Teachers: The Role of Biased Perceptions




AuthorsGarandeau, Claire; Johander, Eerika; Turunen, Tiina; Salmivalli, Christina

Publication year2026

Journal: Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology

Article number51

Volume54

ISSN2730-7166

eISSN2730-7174

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-026-01450-1

Publication's open availability at the time of reportingOpen Access

Publication channel's open availability Partially Open Access publication channel

Web address https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-026-01450-1

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/515939737

Self-archived copy's licenceCC BY

Self-archived copy's versionPublisher`s PDF


Abstract

This study sought to understand why children high in callous-unemotional (CU) traits are less responsive to targeted anti-bullying interventions. We tested the effect of CU traits on intention to stop bullying after a teacher-led anti-bullying intervention and whether this effect was explained by participants’ perceptions of the teacher’s messages. A sample of 843 students in Grade 4 and 7 (49.8% boys, Mage = 11.56) was asked to imagine having bullied a peer and being invited to a meeting with a teacher. They were then shown a video depicting what the teacher would tell them in the meeting. They were randomly assigned to three conditions with different teacher messages (bullying-condemning, empathy-raising or a combination of both) and asked to rate the extent to which they perceived the teacher had condemned the bullying, tried to raise their empathy for the victim, and blamed them as a person. Analyses conducted separately for the whole sample and a subsample of bullying perpetrators revealed that higher levels of CU traits were associated with lower intention to stop bullying and with perceiving more blaming, less bullying-condemning and less empathy-raising from the teacher. These perceptions predicted lower intention to stop and partially mediated the effects of CU traits on intention to stop in the whole sample. In the subsample of perpetrators, only the indirect effect via perceived empathy-raising was statistically significant. One reason why youth high in CU traits are more resistant to anti-bullying intervention may be their biased perceptions of the content of anti-bullying messages.


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Funding information in the publication
Open Access funding provided by University of Turku (including Turku University Central Hospital). This research was supported by the Academy of Finland funding for the INVEST flagship (decision number: 320162), the SHADES Project (ERC-2024-STG: 101164939) awarded to the third author and the CHALLENGE Project (ERC-AdG; 884434) awarded to the last author (project number: 884434)


Last updated on 13/04/2026 11:32:32 AM