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Morningness-Eveningness and Problematic Online Activities
Rigó, A. ✉ [Pigniczkiné Rigó, Adrien (Pszichológia), author] Department of Personality and Health Psychology (ELTE / Pszich_Int)
;
Tóth-Király, I.
;
Magi, A. [Magi, Anna Katalin (Pszichológia), author] Department of Clinical Psychology and Addiction (ELTE / Pszich_Int)
;
Eisinger, A. [Eisinger, Andrea (Pszichológia), author] Doctoral School of Psychology (ELTE)
;
Griffiths, M.D.
;
Demetrovics, Z. [Demetrovics, Zsolt (Addiktológia), author] Department of Clinical Psychology and Addiction (ELTE / Pszich_Int)
English Article (Journal Article) Scientific
Published:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH AND ADDICTION 1557-1874 1557-1882
22
pp. 2766-2786
2024
SJR Scopus - Psychiatry and Mental Health: Q1
Identifiers
MTMT: 33730780
DOI:
10.1007/s11469-023-01017-x
WoS:
000934221700001
EDIT:
107924
Scopus:
85148247615
Other URL:
https://link.springer.com/10.1007/s11469-023-01017-x
Online activities and problematic online behaviors have recently emerged as important research topics. However, only a few studies have explored the possible associations between these behaviors and morningness-eveningness. The authors examined whether eveningness predicts these distinct problematic online behaviors differently and directly or via mediators. The associations between eveningness and three different problematic online behaviors (problematic Internet use, problematic online gaming, and problematic social media use) were explored among a large sample of Hungarian young adults (N = 1729, 57.2% female, Mage = 22.01, SDage = 1.97) by using a self-report survey. Depression and the time spent engaging in online activities were assessed as possible mediators. The effects of age and sex were controlled for. Using structural equation modeling, the results supported the association between eveningness and the higher risk for all three problematic online behaviors and highlighted that these associations were mediated by depressive mood and time spent on the activities. In addition, eveningness also predicted PIU directly. Eveningness is a risk factor for problematic online behaviors not only because of the higher amount of time spent on the activities but also because of the worse mood associated with eveningness. The results highlight that it is important to examine the different types of online activity separately and explore the role of diverse risk factors, among them morningness-eveningness. © 2023, The Author(s).
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2026-05-16 20:10
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