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A cikk állandó MOB linkje:
http://mob.gyemszi.hu/detailsperm.jsp?PERMID=170011
MOB:2026/1
Szerzők:Li, Wenqing; Li, Xiaoyu; Tian, Xin; Zhao, Yinqiu; Li, Jianbing; Yang, Chi
Tárgyszavak:SZENVEDÉLYBETEGSÉGEK; INTERNET; KOMMUNIKÁCIÓ; SERDÜLŐKOR; MENTÁLIS EGÉSZSÉG
Folyóirat:Journal of Behavioral Addictions - 2026. 15. évf. 1. sz.
[https://akjournals.com/view/journals/2006/2006-overview.xml]


  Co-developmental trajectories of specific problematic usage of the internet: Associations with microsystem predictors and adolescents' mental health outcomes / Wenqing Li [et al.]
  Bibliogr.: p. 256-259. - Abstr. eng. - DOI: https://doi.org/10.1556/2006.2025.00367
  In: Journal of Behavioral Addictions. - ISSN 2062-5871, eISSN 2063-5303. - 2026. 15. évf. 1. sz., p. 245-259. : ill.


Background and aims: The Spectrum Hypothesis posits that various forms of problematic usage of the internet (PUI) constitute distinct yet related constructs. However, empirical validation of this hypothesis has largely relied on cross-sectional data, leaving gaps in understanding the co-developmental trajectories of these behaviors during adolescence, their microsystem predictors, and how identified trajectories are associated with mental health outcomes. This study thus aimed to: (a) identify the heterogeneous codevelopmental trajectories of problematic social media use, short video use, and internet game use; (b) examine the microsystem-level factors that predict membership in these distinct trajectories; and (c) investigate how these trajectory classes are associated with mental health outcomes. Methods: A total of 1,975 Chinese middle school students (Mage - 13.51, 52.56% girls) completed measures on three occasions across one year.Results: Parallel process latent class growth modeling revealed five distinct trajectory groups: Low-Stable (61.0%), High-Increasing (8.1%), High-Stable Gaming and Moderate-Decreasing Social Media (15.5%), High-Stable Social Media and Short Video (6.9%), and Moderate-Increasing Social Media (8.4%). Harsh parenting, teacher-student conflict, and bullying victimization predicted worsening co-developmental trajectories. In addition, the High-Increasing class had higher risks for adverse mental health outcomes (i.e., depression, anxiety, and suicidality) compared to the Low-Stable class, whereas other high-risk classes also showed poorer outcomes (though less severe). Conclusions: These findings support the Spectrum Hypothesis from a developmental perspective, highlighting the importance of considering heterogeneity in understanding the co-developmental patterns of PUI forms, their microsystem predictors, and cumulative effects on adolescent mental health.  Kulcsszavak: trajectories, problematic usage of the internet, adolescents, microsystem predictors, mental health outcomes