Abstract

The present study investigates the role of attentional style as a moderator variable between temporal perspective and social network addiction, since little is known about users’ cognitive variables involved in this kind of addictive behavior. To achieve this goal, a sample of 186 volunteers and anonymous social networking sites users (M = 34%; F = 66%; Mage = 22.54 years; SD = 3.94; range: 18 ÷ 45 years) participated in a cross-sectional study. All participants filled out self-report instruments measuring temporal perspective, internal vs. external attentional style, and social network addiction. The results align with the previous literature and show that present fatalistic and past negative time orientations are associated with social network addiction, whereas the future is a negative precursor. Moreover, a four-step hierarchical regression analysis showed that internal attentional style is a significant moderator of the relationship between high levels of temporal perspective and a high level of social network addiction. This result suggests that social network-addicted users are oriented toward internal stimuli such as their intrusive thoughts or feelings and that social network addiction is similar to obsessive compulsive disorders, depression, or anxiety. Despite its limitations, the present study could contribute to the efforts of clinicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, teachers, and all those who seek to combat social network addiction in developing treatment programs to reduce its harmful effects.

Highlights

  • The use of the Internet and its social networking sites (SNSs), such as Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, and Instagram, is a worldwide phenomenon that involves more than 4 billion people in the world [1]

  • Since little is known about the cognitive variables related to social network addiction, the present study investigates the role of attentional style as moderator variables between time perspectives and social network addiction

  • To investigate the hypothesis that attentional style moderates the relation between time perspective and social network addiction, we performed a series of hierarchical regression analyses using SPSS 22

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Summary

Introduction

The use of the Internet and its social networking sites (SNSs), such as Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp, and Instagram, is a worldwide phenomenon that involves more than 4 billion people in the world [1]. Due to this high prevalence, the daily use of this kind of social application represents a sort of “normal” behavior nowadays [2,3], but the excessive use of these technological platforms might become an “uncontrolled” behavior leading to a form of compulsive addiction. Recent studies [17,18,19] linked social network addiction to time perspectives, considering the well-known association between time perspectives and several types of addiction such as gambling [20], alcohol, drugs, tobacco, and cannabis abuse [21,22]

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