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    Title: 幸福感與網路成癮:以實體社會支持與社交媒體使用用途當為調節變項
    Well-being and social media addiction: the moderating effect of offline social support and social media use motivation
    Authors: 雷朵拉
    Remenyi, Dora
    Contributors: 許文耀
    Hsu, Wen-Yau
    雷朵拉
    Dora Remenyi
    Keywords: 幸福感
    網路成癮
    實體社會支持
    社交媒體使用用途
    社交媒體成癮
    網路社會支持
    well-being
    social media addiction
    internet addiction
    online social support
    offline social support
    motivation of social media use
    Date: 2022
    Issue Date: 2022-08-01 18:12:00 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: 隨著社交媒體成癮成為日常生活的一部分,越來越多的人發展社交媒體成癮,然而關於幸福感與社交媒體成癮之間關係的研究卻產生了不一致的結果。本研究基於增強和補償假設,特別是“缺乏的變得缺乏”、“缺乏的變得更富有”和“富有的變得更富有”的假設,其中實體社會支持和上網用途是社交媒體成癮和幸福感之間的調節因素。本研究使用相關性和調節的分組分析來探索1537名台灣成年人樣本的關聯。結果發現社交媒體成癮與幸福感之間存在顯著的負相關關係,並支持了“富人有的變得更富有”的假設,而未能支持其它兩個假設。此外,接受網絡社會支持和辦事這兩個社交媒體使用動機進一步支持了“富人有的變得更富有”的假設。最後,本研究的結果顯示參與者並未因為了其實體社會支持受損,於社交媒體進行補償社會支持的作用,而無社交媒體成癮與幸福感間的負向關係。
    As social media use became the part of everyday life, increasing number of people started developing social media addiction, however investigations regarding the relationship between well-being and social media addiction yielded inconsistent results. The present study is based on enhancement and compensation hypotheses, specifically the ‘poor get poorer’, ‘poor get richer’ and ‘rich get richer’ hypotheses where offline social support and motivation to use the internet are moderators between social media addiction and well-being. The present study used correlation and moderated subgroup analysis to reveal the association on a sample of 1537 Taiwanese adults. The results revealed significant negative relationship between social media addiction and well-being and supported the ‘rich get richer’ hypothesis, while it failed to support the other two. In addition, the two motivations to use, to receive online social support and to do errands further supported the ‘rich get richer’ hypothesis. Finally, the results highlighted that in Taiwan seeking online social support did not, however compensating for negative well-being led to development of social media addiction.
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    Description: 碩士
    國立政治大學
    心理學系
    109752026
    Source URI: http://thesis.lib.nccu.edu.tw/record/#G0109752026
    Data Type: thesis
    DOI: 10.6814/NCCU202200904
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Psychology] Theses

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