Frequency of use, moral incongruence, and religiosity and their relationships with self-perceived addiction to pornography, internet use, social networking and online gaming - Publikacja - MOST Wiedzy

Wyszukiwarka

Frequency of use, moral incongruence, and religiosity and their relationships with self-perceived addiction to pornography, internet use, social networking and online gaming

Abstrakt

Background and Aims Moral incongruence involves disapproval of a behaviour in which people engage despite their moral beliefs. Although considerable research has been conducted on how moral incongruence relates to pornography use, potential roles for moral incongruence in other putative behavioural addictions have not been investigated. The aim of this study was to investigate the role of moral incongruence in self‐perceived addiction to: (1) pornography, (2) internet addiction, (3) social networking, and (4) online gaming. Design A cross‐sectional, preregistered, online survey using multivariable regression. Setting Online study conducted in Poland. Participants 1036 Polish adults aged between 18 and 69 years. Measurements Measures included self‐perceived behavioural addiction to pornography, internet use, social networking and online gaming) and their hypothesized determinants (moral incongruence, frequency of use, time of use, religiosity, age, gender). Findings Higher moral incongruence (β=0.20, p<.001) and higher religiosity (β=0.08, p<.05) were independently associated with higher self‐perceived addiction to pornography. Additionally, frequency of pornography use was the strongest of the analyzed predictors (β=0.43, p<.001). A similar, positive relationship between high moral incongruence and self‐perceived addiction was also present for internet (β=0.16, p<.001), social networking (β=0.18, p<.001) and gaming addictions (β=0.16, p<.001). Religiosity was uniquely, although weakly, connected to pornography addiction, but not to other types of addictive behaviours. Conclusions Moral incongruence may be positively associated with self‐perception of behavioural addictions including not only pornography viewing, but also internet use, social networking and online gaming.

Cytowania

  • 3 4

    CrossRef

  • 0

    Web of Science

  • 3 1

    Scopus

Autorzy (5)

  • Zdjęcie użytkownika  Karol Lewczuk

    Karol Lewczuk

  • Zdjęcie użytkownika  Karolina Lewandowska

    Karolina Lewandowska

  • Zdjęcie użytkownika  Marc N Potenza

    Marc N Potenza

  • Zdjęcie użytkownika  Mateusz Gola

    Mateusz Gola

Cytuj jako

Pełna treść

pełna treść publikacji nie jest dostępna w portalu

Informacje szczegółowe

Kategoria:
Publikacja w czasopiśmie
Typ:
Publikacja w czasopiśmie
Opublikowano w:
ADDICTION nr 116, wydanie 4, strony 889 - 899,
ISSN: 0965-2140
Rok wydania:
2021
DOI:
Cyfrowy identyfikator dokumentu elektronicznego (otwiera się w nowej karcie) 10.1111/add.15272
Weryfikacja:
Brak weryfikacji

wyświetlono 72 razy

Publikacje, które mogą cię zainteresować

Meta Tagi