Zhu Yunjiao, Jin Guifang, Shi Haiyan, Sun Chenyu, Wei Hongyuan, Yang Linsheng, Hao Jiahu, Sun Ying, Su Puyu, Wu Xiaoyan, Tang Xiaowu, Zhang Zhihua
Shangcheng District Center for Disease Control and Prevention (Shangcheng District Health Supervision Institute), Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Anhui Medical University, Hefei, Anhui, China.
Front Public Health. 2025 Mar 25;13:1412480. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1412480. eCollection 2025.
In today's digital age, concerns about internet addiction among adolescents have escalated alongside the widespread use of the internet. Simultaneously, research has spotlighted the influence of psychological factors like self-esteem and social anxiety on addictive behaviors. The aim of this study was to verify the hypothesis regarding social anxiety as a mediator in the association between self-esteem and internet addiction.
A total of 10,158 participants were randomly selected from five vocational schools in Anhui Province, China, with a mean age of 18.5 years. They completed a series of self-administered questionnaires, including the Young Internet Addiction Test (IATS), the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS), and the Self-Esteem Scale (SES). Structural equation modeling (SEM) was employed to examine the mediating role of social anxiety between self-esteem and internet addiction, adjusting for demographic variables such as age, gender, and parental education.
The correlation analysis revealed that self-esteem was significantly negatively correlated with internet addiction, while social anxiety was significantly positively correlated with internet addiction. The indirect effect of self-esteem on internet addiction through social anxiety was 0.11 ( < 0.01), constituting 28.35% of the total effect. Additionally, the total impact of self-esteem on internet addiction was 0.278 ( < 0.01). Subgroup analyses by age and gender confirmed the robustness of these findings, with significant total effects observed across different age groups (14-18 years: total effects = 0.637; 18-24 years: total effects = 0.744; < 0.01) and genders (male: total effects = 0.385; female: total effects = 0.744; < 0.01).
The results indicate that social anxiety plays a significant mediating role in the relationship between self-esteem and internet addiction, affecting both directly and indirectly this association. These findings underscore the importance of addressing self-esteem and social anxiety in interventions aimed at reducing internet addiction among adolescents, suggesting that targeted psychological support could be pivotal in mitigating the risk of developing addictive behaviors online.
在当今数字时代,随着互联网的广泛使用,青少年网络成瘾问题日益受到关注。与此同时,研究突出了自尊和社交焦虑等心理因素对成瘾行为的影响。本研究的目的是验证关于社交焦虑在自尊与网络成瘾之间的关联中作为中介的假设。
从中国安徽省五所职业学校随机选取10158名参与者,平均年龄为18.5岁。他们完成了一系列自填式问卷,包括青少年网络成瘾测试(IATS)、利博维茨社交焦虑量表(LSAS)和自尊量表(SES)。采用结构方程模型(SEM)来检验社交焦虑在自尊与网络成瘾之间的中介作用,并对年龄、性别和父母教育程度等人口统计学变量进行了调整。
相关分析显示,自尊与网络成瘾呈显著负相关,而社交焦虑与网络成瘾呈显著正相关。自尊通过社交焦虑对网络成瘾的间接效应为0.11(<0.01),占总效应的28.35%。此外,自尊对网络成瘾的总效应为0.278(<0.01)。按年龄和性别进行的亚组分析证实了这些结果的稳健性,在不同年龄组(14 - 18岁:总效应 = 0.637;18 - 24岁:总效应 = 0.744;<0.01)和性别(男性:总效应 = 0.385;女性:总效应 = 0.744;<0.01)中均观察到显著的总效应。
结果表明,社交焦虑在自尊与网络成瘾的关系中起着显著的中介作用,对这种关联既有直接影响也有间接影响。这些发现强调了在旨在减少青少年网络成瘾的干预措施中解决自尊和社交焦虑问题的重要性,表明有针对性的心理支持对于降低在线成瘾行为的风险可能至关重要。