Frontiers in Psychology (Sep 2022)

The impact of psychological distress on problematic smartphone use among college students: The mediating role of metacognitions about smartphone use

  • Huohong Chen,
  • Huohong Chen,
  • Jing Ma,
  • Jing Ma,
  • Jinliang Guan,
  • Jinliang Guan,
  • Lin Yin,
  • Lin Yin,
  • Zifu Shi,
  • Zifu Shi,
  • Zifu Shi,
  • Yihan Zhang,
  • Yihan Zhang,
  • Yihan Zhang,
  • Yihan Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.932838
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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A mediation model was constructed to clarify the relationship and mechanisms linking psychological distress to problematic smartphone use (PSU), focusing on the mediating role of metacognitions about smartphone use. A questionnaire method was used to investigate psychological distress, metacognitions about smartphone use, and problematic smartphone use among 664 college students. The results showed that (1) psychological distress had a significant positive predictive effect on problematic smartphone use, and (2) there were differences in the underlying mechanisms linking different types of psychological distress to problematic smartphone use. Specifically, negative metacognition about smartphone use partially mediated the relationship between depression and problematic smartphone use, whereas anxiety could act on problematic smartphone use through the parallel mediation of positive metacognition about smartphone use and negative metacognition about smartphone use, with the latter having a greater positive mediating effect than the former. These findings reveal the mechanism of action linking different types of psychological distress to problematic smartphone use from the perspective of the cognitive-behavioral model of pathological Internet use, which has implications for the prevention and intervention of problematic smartphone use among college students.

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