The Mediating Role of Loneliness and the Moderating Role of Gender between Peer Phubbing and Adolescent Mobile Social Media Addiction

Aug 26, 2022International journal of environmental research and public health

How Loneliness Links Ignoring Peers to Teen Mobile Social Media Addiction and How This Differs by Gender

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Abstract

A total of 830 adolescents reported experiences related to and .

  • Peer phubbing is positively associated with mobile social media addiction among adolescents.
  • partially mediates the relationship between peer phubbing and mobile social media addiction.
  • There are significant gender differences in how peer phubbing affects mobile social media addiction.
  • The direct and indirect effects of peer phubbing are stronger in girls than in boys.

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Key numbers

4.41
Gender Difference in Score
Average score for girls.
0.116
Mediation Effect
Mediating effect of in the model.
54.60%
Percentage of Girls in Sample
Proportion of girls among the 830 adolescents.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates the relationship between , , and in adolescents.
  • It examines how mediates the effects of on addiction and explores gender differences in these dynamics.
  • The study includes 830 adolescents aged 11 to 18 from South China and utilizes self-report surveys.

Essence

  • is positively associated with adolescent , with mediating this relationship. Gender moderates these effects, being stronger in girls.

Key takeaways

  • directly correlates with increased among adolescents. partially mediates this relationship, indicating that feelings of can exacerbate addiction.
  • Gender differences are significant; the effects of and on social media addiction are stronger in girls than boys, suggesting targeted interventions may be necessary.

Caveats

  • The study's cross-sectional design limits the ability to establish causality between , , and addiction. Future research should consider longitudinal designs.
  • Only one type of mobile phone addiction was examined, which may not represent the full spectrum of mobile addiction behaviors.

Definitions

  • Peer phubbing: Feeling ignored by peers due to their attention to mobile phones during social interactions.
  • Loneliness: A negative experience where interpersonal relationships fail to meet individual needs in quality and quantity.
  • Mobile social media addiction: Excessive use of mobile social networking services leading to negative impacts on physical and mental functions.

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