’Parents and schools have an important role to play in teaching their kids about healthy internet use’ said Dr James Donald.
'Parents and schools have an important role to play in teaching their kids about healthy internet use' said Dr James Donald. A new study has found internet addiction in teenagers leads to difficulty regulating emotions. However there was no evidence that pre-existing emotional issues are a predictor of obsessive internet use. Published in the peer-reviewed journal Emotion , the paper is the first longitudinal study to examine the connection between internet addiction among teenagers and emotion regulation difficulties. Over 2,800 adolescents from across 17 Australian high schools took part in the study. Participants were from years 8 to 11 inclusive. Lead author from the University of Sydney Business School, Dr James Donald , said the research tested two hotly-debated ideas: first, whether compulsive internet use leads to emotion regulation difficulties over time; and second, whether underlying emotion regulation difficulties lead to this compulsive behaviour.
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