Assessing online gaming and pornography consumption patterns during COVID-19 isolation using an online survey: Highlighting distinct avenues of problematic internet behavior

•Individuals increased online gaming and online pornography viewing during quarantine.•Those who increased these behaviors were younger individuals, males, and those reported low frequency or poor quality social interactions.•Both groups reported higher levels of depression, anxiety, and urgency imp...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inAddictive behaviors Vol. 123; p. 107044
Main Authors Sallie, Samantha N., Ritou, Valentin J.E., Bowden-Jones, Henrietta, Voon, Valerie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.12.2021
The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd
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Summary:•Individuals increased online gaming and online pornography viewing during quarantine.•Those who increased these behaviors were younger individuals, males, and those reported low frequency or poor quality social interactions.•Both groups reported higher levels of depression, anxiety, and urgency impulsivity.•Increases in online gaming were related to changes employment and more frequent internet use. The Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic has required drastic safety precautions to contain virus spread, involving a protracted self-isolation period. Those with greater perceived or actual life stress are vulnerable to develop problematic internet behaviors. Thus, we assessed how COVID-19 social isolation affected online gaming (OG) and pornography viewing (PV) in the general population. We developed an online cross-sectional survey, Habit Tracker (HabiT), completed by 1,344 adults (≥18 years). HabiT was released internationally with individuals from 80 countries participating; a majority residing in the United States and United Kingdom. We measured changes in OG (IGDS9-SF) and PV (CYPAT) behaviors before and during the COVID-19 quarantine period. We also assessed psychiatric factors such as anxiety, depression (HADS), and impulsivity (SUPPS-P). The primary outcome measures were change in amount of, and current OG and PV severity during quarantine. These measures were related to ten COVID-19-related stress factors. Overall, we observed a large increase in OG and a minor increase in PV. Those who increased OG (63%) and PV (43%) during quarantine were younger individuals, males, those who left the quarantine household infrequently, those who reported low frequency or poor quality social interactions, and those with higher depression, anxiety, and urgency impulsivity. Our findings highlight similarities between forms of problematic internet behaviors driven by stress, depression, anxiety; while highlighting distinct avenues which these behaviors can manifest. We emphasize the relevance of identifying those in need of emotional regulation interventions, to mitigate problematic internet behaviors in the context of COVID-19 isolation.
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ISSN:0306-4603
1873-6327
DOI:10.1016/j.addbeh.2021.107044