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Demographic data of participants
Study finds that one out of eight Americans exhibit signs of problematic Internet use

Stanford University School of Medicine researchers have taken a step toward resolving the debate over whether compulsive use of the Internet merits a medical diagnosis, but opens many questions along the way.  In a telephone-based study, the researchers found that more than one out of eight Americans exhibited at least one possible sign of problematic Internet use. The findings follow results from previous, less rigorous studies that found a significant number of the population could be suffering from some form of Internet addiction.  

“Our telephone survey suggests that potential markers of problematic Internet use are present in a sizeable portion of the population,” the researchers noted in their paper, which appears in the October issue of CNS Spectrums: The International Journal of Neuropsychiatric Medicine.  

“We often focus on how wonderful the Internet is—how simple and efficient it can make things,” elaborated lead author Elias Aboujaoude, MD. “But we need to consider the fact that it creates real problems for a subset of people.”  

Aboujaoude, clinical assistant professor in psychiatry and behavioral sciences and director of Stanford’s Impulse Control Disorders Clinic, said that a small but growing number of Internet users are starting to visit their doctors for help with unhealthy attachments to cyberspace. He said these patients’ strong drive to compulsively use the Internet to check e-mail, make blog entries or visit Web sites or chat rooms, is not unlike what sufferers of substance abuse or impulse-control disorders experience: a repetitive, intrusive and irresistible urge to perform an act that may be pleasurable in the moment but that can lead to significant problems on the personal and professional levels.  

According to preliminary research, the typical affected individual is a single, college-educated, white male in his 30s, who spends approximately 30 hours a week on non-essential computer use. While some may hear this profile and assume that a person’s Internet “addiction” might actually be an extreme fondness for pornography, Aboujaoude stressed that pornography sites are just one part of the problem.  

“Not surprisingly, online pornography and, to some degree, online gambling, have received the most attention—but users are as likely to use other sites, including chat rooms, shopping venues and special-interest Web sites,” he said. “Our survey did not track what specific Internet venues were the most frequented by respondents, but other studies, and our clinical experience, indicate that pornography is just one area of excessive Internet use.”   

The researchers conducted a nationwide household survey and interviewed 2,513 adults. Because no generally accepted screening instrument exists for problematic Internet use, the researchers developed their questions by extrapolating from other compulsive and addictive conditions.  

The researchers found that 68.9 percent were regular Internet users, which is consistent with previous studies, and that:

  • 13.7 percent (more than one out of eight respondents) found it hard to stay away from the Internet for several days at a time
  • 12.4 percent stayed online longer than intended very often or often
  • 12.3 percent had seen a need to cut back on Internet use at some point
  • 8.7 percent attempted to conceal non-essential Internet use from family, friends and employers
  • 8.2 percent used the Internet as a way to escape problems or relieve negative mood
  • 5.9 percent felt their relationships suffered as a result of excessive Internet use

Aboujaoude said he found most concerning the numbers of people who hid their nonessential Internet use or used the Internet to escape a negative mood, much in the same way that alcoholics might. “In a sense, they’re using the Internet to ‘self-medicate,’” he said. “And obviously something is wrong when people go out of their way to hide their Internet activity.”

While the numbers indicate that a subset of people might have a problem with Internet use, Aboujaoude stressed that it’s premature to say whether people in the sample actually have a clinical disorder. “We’re not saying this is a diagnosis—we still need to learn a lot more,” he said. “But this study was a necessary first step toward possibly identifying something clinically significant.”  

Aboujaoude said the next step is to conduct comprehensive clinical interviews on a large sample of people to better identify clinically relevant markers for problematic Internet use, and to better understand whether this phenomenon constitutes an independent psychological disorder.  

Aboujaoude’s Stanford co-authors on this study are Lorrin Koran, MD, emeritus professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, and Nona Gamel, a licensed clinical social worker.



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Surprised?
By Aikouka on 10/18/2006 11:01:53 AM , Rating: 4
I'm not too sure that this surprises too many people when you look at how popular online gaming is becoming (although it is only a mere subset of the entire scope of the study). Especially with the "World of Warcrack" reaching epic proportions in its user base.

But hey, at least I know that I'm now a statistic :).




RE: Surprised?
By FITCamaro on 10/18/2006 11:34:43 AM , Rating: 2
Seriously. "30 hours of non-essential computer use". That applies not just to the internet but also playing games. Now I don't play games that much anymore due to lack of time but still. Someone with less of a life could easily spend 6 hours a day playing games. That doesn't mean they're addicted to the internet, or even that game. Perhaps they're just not very sociable or they are and they just play games with their friends from school or work a lot. Theres nothing wrong with that as long as their real life doesn't suffer as a result. And most will grow out of something like that when they get older or get a girlfriend or something.


RE: Surprised?
By thecoolnessrune on 10/18/2006 12:14:27 PM , Rating: 4
What do they consider "non essential"? My mom and dad consider any use that does not have to do with schooling as non essential. Does this survey follow the same exceptions? Essential is too broad of a term. Maybe some people consider online bill paying essential. What about those that play the stock market all day? Their work is essential and yet they spend more time on a computer than probably anyone else... Personally I only use the computer... I average maybe 10 minutes a day of television while I'm checking the news while getting dressed for school. My entertainment as well as my papers are all conducted using a computer. I believe this study is flawed. Do those with HTPCs become considered as constant computer over users? I don't believe you can accurately gauge computer addiction. There is not enough of a solid standard as to what exactly is considered "essential" computer use.


RE: Surprised?
By Lazarus Dark on 10/18/2006 1:25:49 PM , Rating: 3
i have to agree. The internet has caused a very sudden (in terms of human history) change in how the entire world is entertained, informed, how we work and how we socialize and interact. I don't think they could call this addiction on a large scale. certainly there may be a percentage that are addicted, especially those mentioned such as porn and gambling, but then again a lot of things can become addictive (porn and gambling addictions existed before the internet).

I say they are coming at this the wrong way. The internet is simply the new tv. Originally television provided some entertainment and news freely to many. Then later we found it caused problems as well. Many people watched constantly, forgoing social interaction, exercise, and generally seemed to be living hollow lives. Now the internet has followed a similar path. With one big exception, in my opinion. The internet is interactive. It offers engagement of the participants, a significant improvement over the previous generations "addiction" to tv.

The question is, What is essential anything? What in life is essential besides the basic life processes? I think this is different for each person and you can't say someone who spends much or even all their free time online is addicted. Society as a whole is changing and its hard to define what level of internet use is normal or excessive considering that the internet has the potential to impact, directly or indirectly, almost any part of daily life.

Of course there is the fact that I have just spent a percentage of my day here typing out a message that perhaps only a handful of people may read. So the question may be raised of whether one's internet usage is productive at all. Of course I sometimes wonder the same thing when I am arguing politics and religion with a couple of freinds at applebees. But of course unproductive activity is not necessarily addiction.


RE: Surprised?
By Ringold on 10/19/2006 4:28:33 AM , Rating: 3
I agree with all this agreement.

In the past, to do what I do every day, I'd of had to visit the bank, called my broker(s), driven to a campus more frequently, driven to work more frequently, driven insane amounts to comparison shop, and then utilized news papers, magazines, TV and radio to get a feel for whats going on in the world.

Today, I log in to my Google homepage, and everything going on in my entire life, except for direct access to finances, is right there in various tabs. Finances is as easy as ctrl+t, and instead of running up a phone bill I switch between tabs in GAIM. Consequently, I've been banking with Wachovia and Bank America for one and ten-ish years, respectively, and mostly use Wachovia at the moment, yet.. I've never seen the inside of a Wachovia.. Drive-thru several times, but never inside. Never need to!

And, of course, recreation happens on here too.. Not all of it, nothing like flying a plane, kissing REAL 'females', or kayaking in REAL water (except I'd like to know how to pull down the God Console and disable gators & snakes, but I haven't found lifes ~ yet).

So the survey really just says yes, society actually advances. Amazing concept. :)

Oh, and all this DOES raise productivity. When one can do all of the above on a computer, it gets done quicker, tends to be more accurate, and without any (increasingly more expensive) travel costs. Lowers costs to ourselves, leaves more time for leisure, whatever leisure is for any of us, right? Also leaves more time to work but that doesn't always happen...


RE: Surprised?
By Christopher1 on 10/21/2006 11:19:49 PM , Rating: 2
Well, I'm on the internet about 40 hours a week, playing online games, posting on newspaper forums, etc.

I know that I am hooked and that I don't get out enough, but the problem is that there is NO REASON for me to go out more often. None whatsoever.


RE: Surprised?
By Aikouka on 10/23/2006 12:59:23 PM , Rating: 2
I understand where you're coming from very well.. my parents Super Nintendo and Sega Genesis didn't like me going outside so I always stayed in :x. Of course, people would argue things like social interaction, physical exercise and the such is as good of a reason as any to get outside :P.


RE: Surprised?
By Christopher1 on 10/23/2006 1:11:31 PM , Rating: 2
Yeah, that's true. Problem is that I am not good at 'social interacting' because I have Aspberger's syndrome, a kind of autism.

I just don't like the 'social interaction' because many of my beliefs are....... well, to put it MILDLY, outside of the mainstream so people are ALWAYS picking arguements with me when I express them.


Well, well...
By KaiserCSS on 10/18/2006 10:55:20 AM , Rating: 5
quote:
While some may hear this profile and assume that a person’s Internet “addiction” might actually be an extreme fondness for pornography...


Now they're speaking my language.




RE: Well, well...
By thegrimreaper3 on 10/18/2006 11:06:03 AM , Rating: 5
Daily Tech is my pornography!

mmmmMMMMM... Daily Tech....


I am addicted can I get a hug?
By Randalllind on 10/18/2006 5:34:14 PM , Rating: 3
ROFL. TV goes out I can live for a bit but, if PC dies I am having withdraws within the hours. Then I get grumpy. if it is more then a week you really don't want to know me.

I had my pc die a couple times in the pass and people told me I was a geek on PMS.

Not that I do anything online but hang out on irc and surf the net.




RE: I am addicted can I get a hug?
By Ringold on 10/19/2006 4:49:07 AM , Rating: 2
Man...

My house here has the 'triple play', in the cable companies favor.. I came home from dinner the other night, saw the company digging near the entrance of the subdivision, thought nothing of it.. About an hour later, lost it all; TV, internet, phone.

I was in bed nearly insane with frustration within an hour. I paced the house, tried to find something to do that didnt require net access..

Check Torrents? Nope. Finances? Nope. Game? Nope. Check for any studies that need doing? Nope. Pr0n? Nope.

Poked around OOo 2.0.4 before uninstalling it, used PowerDefrag on two HDs and a 1gb USB stick (useless, I know, but the depths of boredom.. I just wanted to see how fast it would be.. it was fast..) Went on a brief spyware witch hunt.. Tried the next most boring thing I could think of, Windows Update, and quickly realized even that was futile, and went to bed to save my own sanity.

I dont even turn most my machines off, ever. I tell myself, and others, it's because I'm running Boinc and F@H, but really, theres a little part of me that dies when the fans arent spinning, water pump not pumping..


RE: I am addicted can I get a hug?
By Aikouka on 10/19/2006 11:20:51 AM , Rating: 2
My friend, I know how you feel. When the power goes out... everything becomes silent. Almost too silent. As humans, we're so used to the ambient noise that we hear day in and day out from the constantly running machines that when we don't hear it... it's just eerie.

Although even if the power goes out, it's a good thing I own a PSP and a Nintendo DS :).


By AppaYipYip on 10/21/2006 11:13:52 PM , Rating: 2
LOL!! This is awesome. Imagine once North Korea uses some EMP bombs on us, how screwed we'll be. All they have to do is shut down the interweb and the US is screwed.


DUH
By captchaos2 on 10/18/2006 10:54:41 AM , Rating: 2
Well yeah, I'm here all the time on all of my work breaks aren't I?




RE: DUH
By othercents on 10/18/2006 11:27:47 AM , Rating: 2
Just work breaks?


RE: DUH
By dice1111 on 10/18/2006 1:21:34 PM , Rating: 3
Dude, I can't even count how many times a day i hit the refesh button on my RSS feed for daily tech and other sites that I frequent. I am either completely addicted to the internet, or tech news and RSS is my means of obtaining it. I fall into another statistic...

*refesh* oooooo!! President Bush Seeks to Block Enemies from Space!! *Click*


By knightspawn1138 on 10/18/2006 7:43:54 PM , Rating: 3
I wrote a paper on internet addiction back around 1998, and even then there were books and research papers written on the subject. Most of them concluded that this is nothing new, just another form of addiction. In fact, most people who are prone to addictions (whether chemical, or habitiual) are prone to becoming addicted to using the internet. Back in those days, it was Everquest, not WOW causing all the fuss.

The addiction is real, and it is just as powerful as being an alcoholic. The symptoms are almost identical, too. How many times has someone playing WOW or doing something online snapped at their loved ones for something as harmless as asking them to come eat dinner?

Like everything else people get addicted to, there is no (or little) harm in using it in moderation. Drinking a little alcohol is good for the system when done in moderation. Plenty of people can go to Vegas and not become addicted to gambling. Lots of people can play online and still maintain a normal life. It's the people that can't do these things in moderation that form an addiction. They're the ones that need help identifying their actions as addictions. And, just like other addictions, the first step is recognizing and admitting that there is an addiction in the first place. Papers like the one in this article can help people admit that it is possible to become addicted to internet activities, and help them get help to overcome their addiction, and learn to keep their internet use under control.

Funny thing is, I'm writing this comment when I should be working, and that's just one of the signs of internet addiction - using the internet for non-work related activities when at work. Something I do more than I really should.




By Christopher1 on 10/23/2006 1:15:37 PM , Rating: 2
Well, at least with internet addiction, there is no harm to another person usually. There might be harm to your family members or children if you are neglecting them for the sole purpose of surfing the internet, but I know a lot of people who do that in order to drink, use drugs (legal and illegal), and whack off (you know what I mean!).

We need to realize that these people might be getting addicted to the internet because there is NOTHING else in their lives for them to do. They are poor and every cent of money they make goes to supporting their families, so they have no money to go out and do other things offline, so they get hooked on internet use.

It's a coping mechanism for a life that is gone-to-pot because remuneration in jobs is not high enough right now for families to HAVE a social life.


videos
By ted61 on 10/18/2006 11:42:56 AM , Rating: 2
I like to watch Japanamation videos in Japanese over the internet without commercials. I think the MPIAA or whatever AA that is put them up to it.

It is all a plot!




RE: videos
By thecoolnessrune on 10/18/2006 12:07:00 PM , Rating: 2
Isn't it just called anime? O.o ANIME FTW! :P


By dashrendar on 10/18/2006 12:12:54 PM , Rating: 4
Nice article... would've been nicer if it had some porn on the sides.




yeah but
By yacoub on 10/18/2006 1:10:37 PM , Rating: 2
the same study could be done with any other generic entertainment medium/escape and have fairly similar results. Like say, TV.




RE: yeah but
By Lord Zado on 10/18/2006 4:02:48 PM , Rating: 2
This is exactly my point as well. There are probably far more people that spend countless hours in front of the TV than there are people use are addicted to the internet.


intarwebs
By Missing Ghost on 10/18/2006 9:00:16 PM , Rating: 2
I, for one, welcome our new intarwebs overlords.

and, how can you be addicted to porn?




RE: intarwebs
By Ringold on 10/19/2006 4:56:17 AM , Rating: 2
How can you be addicted to porn?

You've never seen anyone fill a 400gb HD with it then, have you? :P

Of course, not sure that was addiction or just, um, filling an unfulfilled need, 'cause now he's married and doesn't have a single incriminating jpeg.

Well, I'm sure he does, but I couldn't find it, which is probably the point; if I can't, neither can his wife.

C:\Program Files\Common\Docs\Incoming\Work\Economics Data 3Q Results\Philly Fed Resv\Spreadsheets\18yroldhoes.rar ftw for him I suppose.


I'm a Statistic
By Ronnell on 10/18/2006 11:40:22 AM , Rating: 3
Damn you dailytech & myspace! *refreshes browser*




Addicted to Daily Tech
By Trisped on 10/18/2006 2:17:14 PM , Rating: 3
This is the only sight I miss when I can't get on... I can make it a few days at least, but not too much more or articles pile up.




I am
By MobileZone on 10/18/2006 8:48:15 PM , Rating: 3
I am addicted.




that explains it...
By m1ldslide1 on 10/18/2006 11:35:48 AM , Rating: 2
Now I understand how all these people got to be "Lifer"s on the forums...




Hahaha
By archcommus on 10/18/2006 12:36:11 PM , Rating: 2
Where TF did they get that graphic.




Not...
By DeepBlue1975 on 10/18/2006 2:08:47 PM , Rating: 2
Why they do speak as if the problem weree on the object and not on the subject that uses the object?
Those people who "abuse" internet, I bet they'd be abusing something else if the whole internet thing didn't exist at all.
When you focus on the object first than the subject, you end up wrapped around ideas like "internet has to be restricted" or "internet is a bad thing", instead of "there are many people who are very likely to get addicted to something as a resultant behavior that comes from a deeper, personal or social problem".

No, no and again no.
Don't blame solely the tool when the subject plays an even bigger part of the problem.




<3 Internet
By Avalon on 10/18/2006 4:14:13 PM , Rating: 2
I think they may be pushing it a bit far trying to reach such a conclusion, but who knows. I know I spend a lot of time on the net, probably about 3 hours a night gaming online and 3 hours a night reading emails, talking to friends (hey, it's cheaper than using minutes on my phone), catching up on the news, finding hot deals, etc. etc.

But it doesn't really seem to have any negative impact on my life. On the whole, it's been rather positive, and it doesn't repress me from being socialable, exercise, take care of myself, or anything like that. I still go out a lot and like to have a good time. In addition, I can easily spend days or weeks away from a computer. I have no problem enjoying a world without tech as much as I do one with tech.

*shrug*




Internet Adiction?
By ITTech on 10/19/2006 10:21:22 AM , Rating: 2
Internet is simply the source of entertainment gaming has gotten very popular over the years simply because of mutiplayer games a very popular title is World Of Warcraft theres around ten million accounts active around the world so if you really come to think about it is not internet addiction is more like gaming addiction...




irony
By kevinkreiser on 10/19/2006 4:14:39 PM , Rating: 2
is it ironic that this news was posted on the internet for people to view? fact of the matter is, the internet is where people go for information, finding and digesting the information online is no different than watching the news on tv or reading articles or books. it's all media, and media is addicting as a whole. this should not come as a surprise, it's just another medium for proliferation of information among other things (games, entertainment, etc.).




Heh.
By joex444 on 10/19/2006 9:54:31 PM , Rating: 2
I think I got everyone beat, though. I have a UPS attached to my comp, along with the cable modem, router, and wireless access point.

So, the power goes out, but the cable doesn't. Of course, the only way I knew the cable didn't go out is my laptop had a charged battery so I could still use the Internet, despite the power outage. Rest of my family is all pissed off the power is out, I couldn't care less.




Hopelessly flawed study!
By mindless1 on 10/21/2006 6:42:48 PM , Rating: 2
This telephone survey, study, cannot even begin to be accurate, because it completely excludes all those so consumed by the internet that they don't even answer their phone anymore!




By Clienthes on 10/26/2006 7:12:26 AM , Rating: 2
my video game addiction. I used to game all the time. Almost failed out of college because of it. Last year I wanted to build a killer gaming rig, so I started researching parts at all the tech forums. After I bought all the stuff for my rig, I put it together and...went back to the tech forums. I haven't hardly played games since. My next computer is gonna have 512 ram and a pentium III. All I need for DailyTech.




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