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Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions
Psychiatry Research, Volume: 323, Start page: 115148
Swansea University Authors: Phil Reed , Angharad Davies
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DOI (Published version): 10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115148
Abstract
Two, three-month long longitudinal studies examined the temporal relationships between problematic internet use (PIU), internet usage, and loneliness ratings, during and after lockdown restrictions. Experiment 1 examined 32, 18-51 year old participants, over a three-month period of lockdown restrict...
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ISSN: | 0165-1781 |
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2023
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v2 62782 2023-03-03 Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions 100599ab189b514fdf99f9b4cb477a83 0000-0002-8157-0747 Phil Reed Phil Reed true false 62586459693e05b2e1063967e76883f1 0000-0003-4190-8894 Angharad Davies Angharad Davies true false 2023-03-03 HPS Two, three-month long longitudinal studies examined the temporal relationships between problematic internet use (PIU), internet usage, and loneliness ratings, during and after lockdown restrictions. Experiment 1 examined 32, 18-51 year old participants, over a three-month period of lockdown restrictions. Experiment 2 studied 41, 18-51 year old participants, over a three-month period following the lifting of lockdown restrictions. Participants completed the internet addiction test, UCLA loneliness scale, and answered questioned about their online usage, at two time points. All cross-sectional analyses revealed a positive relationship between PIU and loneliness. However, there was no association between online use and loneliness. Longitudinal relationships between PIU and loneliness differed during and after lockdown restrictions. During a period of lockdown, there were both positive associations between earlier PIU and subsequent loneliness, and between earlier loneliness and subsequent PIU. However, following the easing of lockdown restrictions, only the temporal relationship between earlier internet addiction and later loneliness was significant. Journal Article Psychiatry Research 323 115148 Elsevier BV 0165-1781 internet usage; problematic internet use; loneliness; social media; longitudinal 5 3 2023 2023-03-05 10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115148 COLLEGE NANME Psychology COLLEGE CODE HPS Swansea University SU Library paid the OA fee (TA Institutional Deal) 2023-06-28T16:38:11.2192491 2023-03-03T15:24:59.5733309 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Phil Reed 0000-0002-8157-0747 1 Angharad Davies 0000-0003-4190-8894 2 Katie Evans 3 Lisa A. Osborne 4 62782__26730__b5e0d195ef774cbdbc8f02148caafb51.pdf Reed et al 2023.docx 2023-03-03T15:28:15.9242320 Output 688780 application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Author's Original true false 62782__27147__4d5f0c768dd84274860eb98d2bf9df75.pdf 62782.pdf 2023-04-20T16:00:31.3664399 Output 1853513 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY licence true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
spellingShingle |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions Phil Reed Angharad Davies |
title_short |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
title_full |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
title_fullStr |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
title_sort |
Longitudinal relationship between problematic internet use with loneliness during and after COVID-19 social restrictions |
author_id_str_mv |
100599ab189b514fdf99f9b4cb477a83 62586459693e05b2e1063967e76883f1 |
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100599ab189b514fdf99f9b4cb477a83_***_Phil Reed 62586459693e05b2e1063967e76883f1_***_Angharad Davies |
author |
Phil Reed Angharad Davies |
author2 |
Phil Reed Angharad Davies Katie Evans Lisa A. Osborne |
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Psychiatry Research |
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323 |
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115148 |
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2023 |
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Swansea University |
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0165-1781 |
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10.1016/j.psychres.2023.115148 |
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Elsevier BV |
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Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
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description |
Two, three-month long longitudinal studies examined the temporal relationships between problematic internet use (PIU), internet usage, and loneliness ratings, during and after lockdown restrictions. Experiment 1 examined 32, 18-51 year old participants, over a three-month period of lockdown restrictions. Experiment 2 studied 41, 18-51 year old participants, over a three-month period following the lifting of lockdown restrictions. Participants completed the internet addiction test, UCLA loneliness scale, and answered questioned about their online usage, at two time points. All cross-sectional analyses revealed a positive relationship between PIU and loneliness. However, there was no association between online use and loneliness. Longitudinal relationships between PIU and loneliness differed during and after lockdown restrictions. During a period of lockdown, there were both positive associations between earlier PIU and subsequent loneliness, and between earlier loneliness and subsequent PIU. However, following the easing of lockdown restrictions, only the temporal relationship between earlier internet addiction and later loneliness was significant. |
published_date |
2023-03-05T16:38:08Z |
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11.037056 |