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Computers in Human Behavior | 2016

A hidden type of internet addiction? Intense and addictive use of social networking sites in adolescents

Kai W. Müller; Michael Dreier; Manfred E. Beutel; E. Duven; S Giralt; Klaus Wölfling

Internet Gaming Disorder has been included as a preliminary diagnosis in DSM-5. The question remains, if there are additional internet activities related to addictive use. Especially, use of social networking sites has been discussed to be related to excessive use, but only few empirical studies are available. We wanted to explore, if use of social networking sites is related to addiction symptoms and psychosocial distress and which variables (demography, personality) predict addictive use. A representative sample of n?=?9173 adolescents (12-19 years) was enrolled. Self-report questionnaires assessed demography, frequency of social networking sites use, internet addiction, personality, and psychosocial distress. Gender-specific associations were found between frequency of use of social networking sites and addiction criteria, especially regarding preoccupation and loss of control. Adolescents using social networking sites intensely were more often classified with internet addiction (4.1% boys, 3.6% girls) and displayed higher psychosocial distress. Frequency of social networking sites use and its addictive use were predicted by similar variables except for extraversion that was only related to frequency of use. Since the intense use of social networking sites can be related to addictive symptoms and is accompanied by psychosocial distress it might be considered as another form of addictive online behavior. Intense use of social networking is correlated with criteria for internet addiction.The prevalence amounted to 4.1% (boys) and 3.6% (girls).Addictive use was related to higher psychosocial distress.Extraversion predicted frequency of SNS-use but not addictive SNS-use.


Addictive Behaviors | 2017

Free-to-play: About addicted Whales, at risk Dolphins and healthy Minnows. Monetarization design and Internet Gaming Disorder

Michael Dreier; Klaus Wölfling; E. Duven; S Giralt; M.E. Beutel; Kai W. Müller

INTRODUCTION Video games are not only changing due to technical innovation, but also because of new game design and monetization approaches. Moreover, elite gamer groups with financial in-game-investments co-finance all users of free-to-play-games. Besides questions on youth protection, the growing popularity of free-to-play games has fostered discussions on supposed associations to Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD). METHOD Children and adolescents using free-to-play browser games were examined in a German school-based representative study (N=3967; age range 12 to 18). Based on a clinical self-report AICA-S (Wölfling et al., 2011), students were categorized into non-problematic, risky, and addicted users. Psycho-social problems (SDQ; Goodman, 1997), perceived stress (PSS; Cohen, Kamarck & Mermelstein, 1983), coping strategies (BriefCOPE; Carver, 1997), and Average Revenue per (Paying) User (ARPU) were investigated as dependent variables. Furthermore, an industry classification (Freeloaders, Minnows, Dolphins, and Whales) for free-to-play gamers was used for additional relations regarding IGD, SDQ, PSS, BriefCOPE, and ARPU. RESULTS Among free-to-play gamers the prevalence of IGD amounted to 5.2%. Subjects classified with IGD displayed higher psycho-social symptoms than non-problematic users, reported higher degrees of perceived stress, and applied dysfunctional coping strategies more frequently. Additionally, we found a higher ARPU among subjects with IGD. CONCLUSION ARPU is significantly associated with IGD. Whales share significant characteristics with addicted video gamers; Dolphins might be classified as risky consumers; Minnows and Freeloaders are rather non-pathological gamers. Vulnerability for stress, dysfunctional coping, and free-to-play gaming represent an unhealthy combination.


The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | 2017

Adding Clinical Validity to the Statistical Power of Large-Scale Epidemiological Surveys on Internet Addiction in Adolescence: A Combined Approach to Investigate Psychopathology and Development-Specific Personality Traits Associated With Internet Addiction

Kai W. Müller; Michael Dreier; E. Duven; S Giralt; Manfred E. Beutel; Klaus Wölfling

OBJECTIVE Research has indicated that internet addiction is associated with psychosocial maladjustment in adolescence. Many epidemiologic surveys are lacking representativeness, and knowledge on disorder-specific risk factors is scarce. One weakness of epidemiologic studies often regards their lack of generalizability to clinical reality. The aim of this study was to provide a detailed description of internet addiction among adolescents, focusing on its prevalence in a population-based context, psychopathological correlates, and predisposing factors. METHODS The main analyses were based on 2 large representative samples of German adolescents (N = 9,293; 12-19 years) collected in 2012, and the results were validated on a consecutive sample of 237 treatment-seeking adolescents (from 2009-2014). The Scale for the Assessment of Internet and Computer Game Addiction (AICA-S), Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), Symptom Checklist-90 Revised (SCL-90R), and NEO-Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI) were administered. RESULTS Internet addiction occurred in 2.6% of adolescents, with almost comparable rates in both genders, whereas female patients (1.3%) were underrepresented among the treatment seekers. Internet-addicted adolescents from the clinical and the nonclinical setting displayed higher psychopathology (SDQ: P < .001) and functional impairment (Global Assessment of Functioning: P < .001) than adolescents with nonproblematic internet use. Low conscientiousness (in boys: β = -0.161 to -0.220; in girls: β = -0.103 to -0.240) and high negative affect (in boys: β = 0.141 to -0.193; in girls: β = 0.175 to 0.290) were personality correlates of internet addiction. CONCLUSIONS Internet addiction is a widespread problematic behavior among male and female adolescents, and it is related to psychopathological symptoms. Low conscientiousness and high negative affect were identified as stable correlates for internet addiction independent of age and gender and can therefore be considered as risk factors for internet addiction.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Prevalence and determinants of online-sex use in the German population

Manfred E. Beutel; S Giralt; Klaus Wölfling; Yve Stöbel-Richter; Claudia Subic-Wrana; Iris Reiner; Ana N. Tibubos; Elmar Brähler

Introduction The unlimited access to sexual features in the World Wide Web has raised concerns about excessive and problematic online-sex use. However, little is known about antecedents of internet-sex use of different intensity. Based on a representative German sample of 2,522 participants between the ages of 14 and 97 years, the aims of the present study were (1) to determine the prevalence rates of online-sex users with the short version (ISSTGSV) of the Internet Sex Screening Test and (2) to associate online-sex use with anxious vs. avoidant partner attachment patterns and “Big Five” personality traits as potential antecedents. Results The ISST is a brief, one-dimensional and reliable measure of online-sex activities (rtt = .69). Overall, 14.7% of respondents reported occasional and 4.2% intensive online-sex use. In multivariate analysis, online-sex use was significantly positively associated with male sex, younger age, unemployment and an anxious partner attachment pattern and negatively with conscientiousness and agreeableness. Conclusions Arousal and satisfaction by virtual enactment of sexual phantasies may be attractive for anxiously attached persons who find it difficult to commit to a real life relationship due to fear of rejection or low self-esteem. More knowledge about the individual antecedents of intensive online-sex use may also be helpful for the development of consultation and treatment strategies for excessive and addictive online-sex use.


Suchttherapie | 2011

Emotionale Befindlichkeit und dysfunktionale Stressverarbeitung bei Personen mit Internetsucht

Klaus Wölfling; Kai W. Müller; S Giralt; Manfred E. Beutel


Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology | 2015

Prevalence and correlates of depersonalization in students aged 12-18 years in Germany.

Matthias Michal; E. Duven; S Giralt; Michael Dreier; Kai W. Müller; Julia Adler; Manfred E. Beutel; Klaus Wölfling


Suchttherapie | 2013

Eine detaillierte Charakterisierung von Browsergamern unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Monetarisierung dieses Spielegenres

M Dreier; Klaus Wölfling; E Duven; Manfred E. Beutel; Kai W. Müller; S Giralt


Suchttherapie | 2013

Bitte klicken Sie hier, wenn Sie über 18 sind: Onlinesexnutzung bei Minderjährigen mit problematischem Glücksspielverhalten - Ergebnisse einer repräsentativen Untersuchung

S Giralt; E Duven; Kai W. Müller; Klaus Wölfling; M Dreier; Manfred E. Beutel


Suchttherapie | 2013

Problematische Nutzung von Online-Sexangeboten - Ergebnisse einer repräsentativen Studie

S Giralt; Klaus Wölfling; L Spangenberg; Y Stöbel-Richter; Manfred E. Beutel; E Brähler


Suchttherapie | 2013

Landesprogramm „Glücksspielsuchtprävention und Beratung Spielsüchtiger“ Rheinland-Pfalz - Langzeitbetrachtung zur flächendeckenden Versorgung Pathologischer Glücksspieler und Internetsüchtiger

S Giralt; Klaus Wölfling; Manfred E. Beutel

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