psychology4 papersavg year 2018quality 7/5weak evidence

Although many past studies have examined the relationship between metacognitive beliefs and Internet addiction, the association between metacognitive beliefs and problematic SNS use has not been adequ

Research gap analysis derived from 4 psychology papers in our local library.

The gap

Although many past studies have examined the relationship between metacognitive beliefs and Internet addiction, the association between metacognitive beliefs and problematic SNS use has not been adequately explored.

Consensus across the literature

Clustered from 4 gap mentions across 4 papers via embedding cosine ≥ 0.62.

Research trend

Established — well-defined area with open sub-problems.

Supporting evidence — 4 representative gaps

  • Neurocognitive function among individuals with problematic social media use (2026) · doi

    Author contributions This is a cross-sectional study, so no inferences about causality can be made. Secondly, the majority of participants (80%) were women, and there is evidence that they perform better on cognitive tasks measuring impulsivity, such as delay discounting, but the effect is moderated by hormonal changes during the menstrual cycle (81). Third, the BSMAS may create a potential classification bias since it includes the 6 components of addiction. There are other questionnaires assessing dimensions of social networking use, but they do not assess components of excessive or problematic social media use, which are important in order to determine impulsivity and compulsivity. Fourth, there was no correlation between sub- jective reports of impulsivity or compulsivity and cognitive tasks’ performance, suggesting that these examine different cognitive mechanisms. Perhaps tasks that utilize social media stimuli are better suited to detect impulsivity and compulsivity. Finally, assess- ing compulsivity using cognitive tasks is problematic, and very few studies have shown cognitive impairments in clinical or subclinical populations like excessive users of the internet.

    Keywords: cognitive tasks impulsivity compulsivity there social better components assess excessive problematic media author contributions cross
  • The relationship between dysfunctional metacognitive beliefs and problematic social networking sites use (2020) · doi

    Although many past studies have examined the relationship between metacognitive beliefs and Internet addiction, the association between metacognitive beliefs and problematic SNS use has not been adequately explored.

    Keywords: metacognitive beliefs past examined relationship internet addiction association problematic adequately explored
  • Internet Addiction or Excessive Internet Use (2010) · doi

    CONCLUSIONS AND SCIENTIFIC SIGNIFICANCE: Although Internet-addicted individuals have difficulty suppressing their excessive online behaviors in real life, little is known about the patho-physiological and cognitive mechanisms responsible for Internet addiction.

    Keywords: internet conclusions scientific significance addicted individuals difficulty suppressing excessive online behaviors real life little known
  • Neural substrates of risky decision making in individuals with Internet addiction (2015) · doi

    However, relatively little is known about the behavioral and neural mechanisms that underlie Internet addiction, especially with respect to risky decision making, which is an important domain frequently reported in other types of addictions.

    Keywords: relatively little known behavioral neural mechanisms underlie internet addiction especially respect risky decision making important

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