Eseesega ole tulaga ole tulaga ole mea ole Initaneti e faavae i luga ole tali popole ole manatu ole mafaufau ole Initaneti ole gaoioiga autonomy (2010)

COMMENTS: Subjects identified as Internet addicts had much higher sympathetic nervous system activation (adrenaline) when surfing the internet.


Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2010 Aug;13(4):371-8.
 
Lu DW, Wang JW, Huang AC.

puna

Department of Psychology, Fo Guang University, No. 160 Linwei Road, Jiaosi Shiang, Yilan County, Taiwan.

lē faʻatino

How high-risk Internet addiction (IA) abusers respond to different autonomic nervous activities compared with low-risk subjects may be a critical research goal with prevention and treatment implications.

The aim of the present study was to address this issue by matauina o feeseeseaiga i le va o le maualuga ma le itiiti o le lamatiaga o le IA i ni suʻesuʻega e fa o le physiological pe a faimalaga le Initaneti: blood volume pulse (BVP), skin conductance (SC), peripheral temperature (PTEMP), and respiratory response (RESPR). Forty-two male and ten female participants aged 18-24 years were screened with the Chen Internet Addiction Scale (CIAS, 2003), and then separated into high- and low-risk IA groups. Using psychophysiology equipment, participants encountered a 3-minute adaptation period followed by a 6-minute testing period for surfing the Internet on baseline and testing phases. The present results indicate that: (a) the CIAS scores were positively and negatively correlated with the RESPR and the PTEMP; (b) the PTEMP and RESPR of high-risk IA abusers were respectively weaker and stronger than those of low-risk IA abusers; the BVP and SC of high-risk IA abusers were respectively augmented and decreased relative to low-risk IA abusers. Thus we suggest that four autonomic responses may be differentially sensitive to abusers’ potency in terms of the IA hypothesis of autonomic activity. The stronger BVP and RESPR responses and the weaker PTEMP reactions of the high-risk IA abusers indicate the sympathetic nervous system was heavily activated in these individuals. However, SC activates parasympathetic responses at the same time in the high-risk IA abusers. The paradoxical responses between the sympathetic and parasympathetic actions are addressed in the discussion.