Presenting a Model for the Structural Relationships between Attachment Styles and Internet Addiction According to the Mediating Role of Self-Esteem
This study aimed to determine the structural relationships between attachment styles and internet addiction, regarding meditating the role of self-esteem. This study was descriptive-correlational. Participants were 300 undergraduate students of Tabriz University in 2018-19, selected by multistage cluster sampling. The instruments were the internet Addiction Questionnaire (Yang, 1998), Adults Attachment Inventory (Hazan and Shaver, 1987) and Self-esteem Scale (Rosenberg, 1979). Data were analyzed by using the structural equation modeling method and the results showed that the measured model has a relatively favorable fit with the theoretical model (RMSEA=0.04, CFI=0.91, GFI=0.92). Attachment styles, in addition to their direct role, could significantly explain the symptoms of internet addiction through self-esteem. Based on these findings, it can be concluded that deficits in parental functions and insecure relations with caregivers affect individuals' self-esteem, and fluctuating self-esteem is associated with problematic behaviors like extreme tendency to the internet. It is suggested to consider the role of attachment styles and self-esteem in prevention and treatment interventions of internet addiction.
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Psychometric investigation of the Persian Version of the Cognitive, Affective, and Somatic Empathy Scale (CASES) for Adults
Arezou Lashkari, i*
Journal of Research in Psychological Health, -
The relationships between attributional styles and identity with responsibility through mediating role of competence perception
Nasrin Mozaffar Sani Azar *, , Fatemeh Namati Sogli Tapeh
Social Psychology Research,