Frontiers in Psychology (Jan 2023)

The relationship between anxiety and depression with smartphone addiction among college students: The mediating effect of executive dysfunction

  • JiaMin Ge,
  • JiaMin Ge,
  • Ya Liu,
  • Ya Liu,
  • Wenjing Cao,
  • Wenjing Cao,
  • Shuyin Zhou,
  • Shuyin Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1033304
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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Smartphone addiction symptom is increasing globally. Many studies have found that negative emotion is associated with smartphone addiction, but few explore the mediating effect of executive dysfunction. In a large-scale, cross-sectional survey, 421 Chinese college students completed measures on anxiety, depression, smartphone addiction, and executive dysfunction. We surveyed the prevalence of depression, impaired executive function, and smartphone addiction. A confirmatory factor analysis was performed on the questionnaire structure, and the mediation models were used to examine the relationship between anxiety, depression, impaired executive function, and smartphone addiction. The main finding indicated that anxiety, depression, and executive dysfunction were positively and significantly associated with smartphone addiction. Executive dysfunction plays a mediation role between anxiety and depression with smartphone addiction. Specifically, executive dysfunction completely mediates the pathway of anxiety and smartphone addiction and partly mediates the path of depression and smartphone addiction. Depression directly predicted smartphone addiction positively but anxiety did not. The sample consisted of Chinese college students, which limits generalizability and self-reported lack of objectivity. The result suggests that we should pay more attention to the mediating role of executive dysfunction between negative emotion and smartphone addiction.

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