Title of article :
Contributions of Psychopathological and Interpersonal Variables to
Problematic Facebook Use in Adolescents and Young Adults
Author/Authors :
Chabrol Henri نويسنده Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche en PsychoPathologie
(CERPP), University Toulouse 2, Toulouse, France , Laconi Stephanie نويسنده Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche en PsychoPathologie
(CERPP), University Toulouse 2, Toulouse, France , Delfour Manon نويسنده Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche en PsychoPathologie
(CERPP), University Toulouse 2, Toulouse, France , Moreau Axelle نويسنده Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche en PsychoPathologie
(CERPP), University Toulouse 2, Toulouse, France
Abstract :
Background Problematic Facebook use, also known as Facebook
addiction, has recently been recognized as a cause of potential harm to
adolescents and young adults. Some problematic Internet use risk factors
have been linked to Facebook use. Yet few studies have explored the risk
factors for problematic Facebook use in young people. Objectives The aim
of this study was to evaluate the contribution of psychopathological
variables, in particular borderline traits and interpersonal variables
(i.e., parent and peer attachments and parental bonding styles), to the
explanation of problematic Facebook use symptoms by taking gender into
account and controlling for motives, one of the most important risk
factors for problematic Facebook use. Patients and Methods The final
sample consisted of 456 Facebook users (227 women) aged from 12 to 25 (M
= 20.5; SD = 2.5). These participants completed online self-report
questionnaires assessing problematic Facebook use, motives for Facebook
use, depressive symptoms, social anxiety, sensation seeking, borderline
personality traits, parental bonding and attachment, and peer
attachment. Results Multiple regression analyses showed that motives and
maternal overprotection were the main predictors of problematic Facebook
use symptoms in both genders. Mediation analyses suggested that
borderline personality traits and overprotection played different roles
in the development of problematic Facebook use symptoms. In females,
borderline traits were a mediator in the relation between maternal
overprotection and problematic Facebook use symptoms. In males, maternal
overprotection was a mediator in the relation between borderline traits
and problematic Facebook use symptoms. To our knowledge, this is the
first study exploring the contribution of parental bonding and
borderline traits to problematic Facebook use.
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics