4.2 Article

Is it meaningful to distinguish between generalized and specific Internet addiction? Evidence from a cross-cultural study from Germany, Sweden, Taiwan and China

Journal

ASIA-PACIFIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 20-26

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/appy.12122

Keywords

China; generalized and specific Internet addiction; Germany; Sweden; Taiwan

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Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [MO-2363/2-1]

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IntroductionIt has been hypothesized that two distinctive forms of Internet addiction exist. Here, generalized Internet addiction refers to the problematic use of the Internet covering a broad range of Internet-related activities. In contrast, specific forms of Internet addiction target the problematic use of distinct online activities such as excessive online video gaming or activities in social networks. MethodsThe present study investigates the relationship between generalized and specific Internet addiction in a cross-cultural study encompassing data from China, Taiwan, Sweden and Germany in n=636 participants. In this study, we assessed - besides generalized Internet addiction - addictive behavior in the domains of online video gaming, online shopping, online social networks and online pornography. ResultsThe results confirm the existence of distinct forms of specific Internet addiction. One exception, however, was established in five of the six samples under investigation: online social network addiction correlates in large amounts with generalized Internet addiction. DiscussionIn general, it is of importance to distinguish between generalized and specific Internet addiction.

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