Executive Functions and Problematic Internet Use among University Students: The Mediator Role of Self-Esteem
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Pichardo Martínez, María Del Carmen; Romero López, Miriam; Ruiz Durán, Alba; García Berbén, TrinidadEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Internet addiction Self-esteem Inhibition Flexibility Emotional control Executive functions Risk factor
Fecha
2021-10-04Referencia bibliográfica
Pichardo, C... [et al.]. Executive Functions and Problematic Internet Use among University Students: The Mediator Role of Self-Esteem. Sustainability 2021, 13, 11003. [https://doi.org/10.3390/su131911003]
Resumen
Information and communication technologies are transforming our daily lives in a wide
variety of ways, such as the way we work, study, and interact with others. There are clear benefits
to be gained from appropriate use, but a problem arises when addictive and problematic use of the
Internet is experienced. In this sense, several predictive factors can be related to inappropriate or
problematic Internet use. For this reason, the present study aimed to analyze whether inhibition,
flexibility, emotional control (executive functions) and self-esteem directly influence all variables
of problematic Internet use. Furthermore, it was examined whether executive functions, mediated
by self-esteem, indirectly influence problematic Internet use. The study involved 514 university
students who completed three scales, one for the assessment of problematic Internet use, one for
self-esteem and one for executive functions. Mediation models showed that both executive functions
and self-esteem had an influence on different problematic uses of the Internet. Specifically, it was
found that flexibility and emotional control were the variables with the most direct effects, as they
influenced all variables of problematic Internet use. However, when self-esteem was included as a
mediator, inhibition was the variable with the most indirect effects.