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More research is being conducted to
explore the way people use--and misuse--the
Internet.
BY TORI DeANGELIS
If you believe what you read,
"Internet addiction" is about to make
us a nation of derelicts. Men drooling
over online pornography, women
abandoning their husbands for chat-room
lovers and people losing their life
savings on gambling Web sites are just
a few of the stories peddled in
today's press.
But despite the topic's prominence,
published studies on Internet
addiction are scarce. Most are surveys,
marred by self-selecting samples and
no control groups. The rest are
theoretical papers that speculate on
the philosophical aspects of Internet
addiction but provide no data.
Meanwhile, many psychologists even
doubt that addiction is the right term
to describe what happens to people
when they spend too much time online.
"It seems misleading to characterize
behaviors as 'addictions' on the basis
that people say they do too much of
them," says Sara Kiesler, PhD, a
researcher at Carnegie Mellon
University and co-author of one of the
only controlled studies on Internet
usage, published in the September 1998
American Psychologist. "No research
has yet established that there is a
disorder of Internet addiction that is
separable from problems such as
loneliness or problem gambling, or
that a pa ssion for using the Internet
is long-lasting."
But more psychologists are plunging
into Internet addiction research,
fascinated by its emotional,
psychological and social implications.
In their work, they are finding a
subset of people who spend so much
time online, especially in sexual
encounters, that they report problems
in their marriages, families and work.
In addition, researchers speculate
that certain unique aspects of the
Internet may lure people into trouble
they might otherwise avoid.
"The Internet is
unlike anything we've seen before,"
says David Greenfield, PhD, founder of
the
Center for Internet Studies (www.virtual-addiction.com).
"It's a socially connecting device
that's socially isolating at the same
time."
Who's vulnerable?
Greenfield has
conducted one of the largest surveys
on the topic to date: a 1998 study of
18,000 Internet users who logged onto
the ABC News Web site,
abcnews.com.
He found that 5.7 percent of his
sample met the criteria for compulsive
Internet use. Those findings square
with figures from smaller studies done
by others, which range from 6 percent
to 14 percent. Study participants who
met Greenfield's criteria (adapted
from criteria for compulsive gambling)
were particularly hooked on chat rooms,
pornography, online shopping and
e-mail, he found. About a third said
they use the Internet as a form of
escape or to alter their mood on a
regular basis.
In addition, the "addicted" people
were far more likely to admit feelings
of losing control in their dealings on
the Net than "nonaddicts." Greenfield
believes that the loss of control is
just one indication of the potency of
the psychoactive nature of the
Internet. Other signs include time
distortion, accelerated intimacy and
decreased inhibition. For instance, 83
percent of those who fit the addiction
criteria reported a loss of boundaries
when they used the Net, compared to 37
percent who didn't meet the criteria.
Meanwhile, 75 percent of "addicts"
said they had gained "feelings of
intimacy" for someone they'd met
online, compared to 38 percent of "nonaddicts."
Of those who met Greenfield's criteria
for Internet addiction, 62 percent
said they regularly logged on to
pornography sites, spending an average
of four hours a week viewing the
material. And 37.5 percent of that
group masturbated while online, they
said.
"Regardless of the technical
definition of Internet addiction,
there is clearly something unique and
powerful going on here," Greenfield
says. "The most widely affected areas
seem to be marriages and relationships
due to compulsive pornography,
cybersex and cyberaffairs."
Chat rooms and porn sites
Many studies, including Greenfield's,
also report a preponderance of male
Internet addicts. In an unpublished
study of 1,300 college students by
Keith Anderson, PhD, of Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, 91 of the 103
students who met his criteria for
"Internet dependence" were male.
But other
studies, including one of the first
studies on Internet addiction, by
Kimberly Young, PhD, find that women
are addicted as often as men--just in
different ways. Young, who treats
people with Internet problems, is
executive director of the Center for
On-line Addiction (www.netaddiction.com),
founded in 1995. Hers is the first
behavioral health-care firm to
specialize in Internet-related
disorders, offering outpatient and
online treatment.
Men and women "addicts" seem to prefer
sites that fit behavioral stereotypes
of their own gender, according to a
study by Alvin Cooper, PhD, and
colleagues in the March 2000 issue of
Sexual Addiction and Compulsion: The
Journal of Treatment and Prevention.
Their research--which is the only
analysis to specifically focus on
Internet sexuality--found that women
were more likely to spend time
flirting or having "cybersex" with
others in sexually oriented chat rooms,
while men were drawn to porn Web sites.
"Men prefer visual stimuli and more
focused sexual experiences, while
women are more interested in
relationships and interactions," says
Cooper, who is training coordinator at
Stanford University's counseling and
psychological services center, Cowell
Student Health Center.
In a study in
the May 1998 issue of Professional
Psychology: Research and Practice,
Cooper also found that more than 91
percent of Internet users spent less
than 11 hours a week logging on to
sexual sites. About 82 percent spent
less than an hour doing so, "with very
few negative repercussions," he says.
(Full text of these research articles
appears at
www.sex-centre.com.)
But men and women "addicts" who spent
the most time each week online--11
hours or more--said it was their chat
room behavior that most interfered
with important aspects of their lives.
Cooper will investigate further
exactly what those problems are, such
as whether online sexuality leads to
sex offline, why people might go
online when they're already in a
sexual relationship and how such
compulsion affects people's home and
work lives.
The Internet also seems to invite both
genders to experiment in ways they
might otherwise not, Cooper finds. A
full 12 percent of women in his sample
of 9,265 respondents, compared with 20
percent of the men, have accessed
pornography at least once. Cooper
speculates that women who visit porn
sites may "just be experimenting and
wanting to see what the big deal is."
The available research leads
psychologists to question whether
those involved in cybersex have sexual
addictions, or whether they otherwise
wouldn't engage in illicit sexual
encounters but find the Internet an
easy medium in which to experiment.
Cooper labels about 17 percent of his
sample "at-risk" users--people who "wouldn't
otherwise have gotten involved with
sexuality in a problematic way, were
it not for the Internet." Certain
qualities of the Internet--its
accessibility, affordability and
anonymity--make it more difficult to
resist the temptation of online sex,
Cooper believes.
But for now, this and other questions
about Internet use will remain
unanswered until more controlled
studies are done, critics say. An
article in the Feb. 4 issue of the
Chronicle of Higher Education outlined
what those studies should investigate.
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
psychologists Joseph B. Walther, PhD,
and Larry D. Reid, PhD, suggest that
future research include:
* An empirical look not just at
problem use, but at healthy use as
well.
* More theory and research on why the
Internet compared with other outlets
is so attractive to some people.
* More study of which comes first,
Internet "addiction" or previous
mental health or social problems.
It's also important to examine whether
people's Internet use ebbs and flows
over time and why, Kiesler and
colleagues note. |