Browsing by Subject "Internet addiction"
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Item Disconnected marriage, connected Internet: exploring the relationship between problematic Internet use, acculturative stress, and marital intimacy among Korean married couples in the United States(2013-07) Jin, Seok WonProblematic Internet use (PIU) is a growing though unexplored problem among Korean married couples in the United States. The present study aimed to examine the relationship between PIU, acculturative stress (AC), and marital intimacy (MI) among Korean married couples in Minnesota. Forty Korean heterosexual couples aged 18 to 54 were recruited through a combination of convenience and snowball sample from metropolitan areas in Minnesota. Participants completed survey questionnaires via email. Outcome variables were self- and partner-rated Internet Addiction Test (IAT) scores, respectively. Primary predictor variables were AC scores and MI scores. Multilevel models were fitted to estimate the effects of Actor-Partner Interdependence Model (APIM), a statistical methodology designed to analyze dyadic data. Data analyses were conducted using SAS 9.3. The results suggested that a person's levels of acculturative stress (p=.0574) marginally influenced his or her own PIU scores while the partner's levels of acculturative stress (p=.0036) significantly affected partner-rated PIU scores. Furthermore, the study demonstrated that a person's marital intimacy (Consensus, p=.0993) marginally predicted his or her own PIU scores while the partner's levels of marital intimacy (Overall marital intimacy, p=.0063; Consensus, p=.0004; Openness, p=.0136; Affection, p=.0282; Commitment, p=.0020) significantly predicted partner-rated PIU scores. In addition, the result indicated that marital intimacy decreased the estimate regression coefficient of the acculturative stress to self-rated IAT scores by 16.3% while social support satisfaction decreased the estimate regression coefficient of the acculturative stress to self-rated IAT scores by 30.7%. Finally, the results showed that the degree of difference between self- and spouse-rated IAT scores was positively associated with the difference of actor's and partner's acculturative stress and partner's marital intimacy. On the practices with married couples seeking professional help especially for partners' PIU, it is noteworthy for mental health practitioners to investigate not only their Internet use but also their relational quality, especially marital intimacy. Moreover, these findings suggest the importance of interventions in decreasing PIU by enhancing couples' marital quality in a family structure, considering gender differences in their effects. Finally, these findings support the importance of culturally-tailored interventions that target PIU as a means of enhancing Asian couples' marital quality in the United States.Item The Millennial Student: A Strategy for Improved Wellness(2013-01-14) Layer, RhondaThis thesis explores the idea that a significant number of globally connected Millennials (those born between 1980 and 2000), more than previous generations, engage in compulsive behaviors around the use of social media Internet websites and mobile phones and in greater numbers suffer from inattentiveness, social disconnection, depression and anxiety. Meditation can mitigate the effects of addictive use of technology by bringing Millennials back to present moment awareness and attentiveness, decrease the need for their compulsive use of social media via the Internet, as well as alleviate the physiological effects of depression and anxiety. Mindfulness and meditation may encourage Millennials to develop the face-to-face social skills necessary for meaningful social, educational and professional connections.