Stress and online social networks with Annica Kessling and Elisa Wegmann

Stress and online social networks with Annica Kessling and Elisa Wegmann

In this episode, Dr Tsen Vei Lim speaks to Dr Elisa Wegmann and Annica Kessling, a post-doctoral research fellow and a PhD student at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany. The interview covers Annica and Elisa’s research article on the effects of acute psychosocial stress on cue-reactivity, attentional bias and implicit associations in women with problematic social network use: An experimental study

  • What is problematic social network use? [01:36]
  • The controversy of social network use as an addiction [02:50]
  • What we already know about cognition in people with problematic social network use [03:37]
  • What Annica and Elisa mean by implicit cognition in this context [05:21]
  • Why it is important to study stress and social network use [06:09]
  • The recruitment and experiments of the study [07:55]
  • Examples of the paradigms used [09:42]
  • The key findings of the study [11:53]
  • Annica and Elisa’s thoughts on their paradoxical findings [12:45]
  • Do the findings change how we view problematic social network use? [14:22]
  • What do the findings add to the debate of social network use as an addiction behaviour [16:37]

About Tsen Vei Lim: Tsen Vei is an academic fellow supported by the Society for the Study of Addiction, currently based at the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cambridge. His research integrates computational modelling, experimental psychology, and neuroimaging to understand the neuropsychological basis of addictive behaviours. He holds a PhD in Psychiatry from the University of Cambridge (UK) and a BSc in Psychology from the University of Bath (UK).

About Annica Kessling: Annica is a PhD student at the Chair of General Psychology: Cognition at the University of Duisburg-Essen and a member of the research group FOR2974 “Affective and Cognitive Mechanisms of Specific Internet-Use Disorders,” within which she is completing her doctoral research. Her work focuses on problematic social media use, examining affective and implicit cognitive mechanisms as well as the impact of stress and predisposing variables on usage behaviour. A central component of her research involves experimental designs that integrate both objective and subjective measures to capture the complex interplay underlying maladaptive social network use.

About Elisa Wegmann: Elisa is a post-doctoral research fellow at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Department of General Psychology: Cognition. Her research focuses on the problematic use of social media and a better understanding of this potential disorder based on theoretical considerations and the identification of similarities and differences to other addictive behaviours. This is addressed by investigating the interplay of predisposing variables with affective and cognitive mechanisms resulting in significant impairments in daily life due to social media through a variety of methods such as clinical diagnostics, physiological markers, and the implementation and development of experimental paradigms and questionnaires.

The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Original article: Effects of acute psychosocial stress on cue-reactivity, attentional bias and implicit associations in women with problematic social network use: An experimental study https://doi.org/10.1111/add.70099

The opinions expressed in this podcast reflect the views of the host and interviewees and do not necessarily represent the opinions or official positions of the SSA or Addiction journal.

The SSA does not endorse or guarantee the accuracy of the information in external sources or links and accepts no responsibility or liability for any consequences arising from the use of such information.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Episoder(126)

Pre-registration with John Marsden

Pre-registration with John Marsden

In this episode of Addiction Audio, Professor John Marsden talks about the role of pre-registration in increasing research transparency. He addresses the anxieties that people can have about pre-regis...

16 Mar 202229min

ADHD and maternal substance use with Elis Haan

ADHD and maternal substance use with Elis Haan

Dr Elis Haan talks to Dr Rob Calder about ADHD and maternal substance use. She discusses her recent paper which explored the impact of smoking, alcohol and drugs during pregnancy on ADHD outcomes in y...

28 Feb 202217min

JITAIs and using smartphones to prevent lapse with Olga Perskie

JITAIs and using smartphones to prevent lapse with Olga Perskie

Rob Calder talks to Dr Olga Perski about her recent research on just-in-time adaptive interventions (JITAIs) whereby smartphones are used to help prevent lapses among people who are trying to quit or ...

27 Okt 202130min

Mental imagery and cocaine craving with John Marsden

Mental imagery and cocaine craving with John Marsden

Rob Calder talks to Professor John Marsden about cocaine cravings. Professor Marsden discusses the lack of pharmacological treatments for cocaine, and about his recent study using mental imagery to ad...

20 Okt 202131min

Drug treatment commissioning and market mechanisms with Alison Ritter

Drug treatment commissioning and market mechanisms with Alison Ritter

Professor Alison Ritter talks about her recent paper “Are market mechanisms associated with alcohol and other drug treatment outcomes” and about the Australian context of drug treatment provision and ...

15 Okt 202122min

The Paper Authoring Tool (PAT) with Robert West

The Paper Authoring Tool (PAT) with Robert West

Rob Calder talks to Professor Robert West about the Paper Authoring Tool (PAT). Professor West talks about how PAT can be used in the design and write-up phases of a randomised controlled trials, abou...

14 Sep 202127min

Cannabis, opioids and the gateway hypothesis with Jack Wilson

Cannabis, opioids and the gateway hypothesis with Jack Wilson

Jack Wilson talks to Rob Calder about his recent systematic review and meta-analysis on whether cannabis use increases the likelihood of later life opioid use or opioid use disorders. Jack talks about...

15 Jul 202116min

Cannabis, schizophrenia and genetics with Emma Johnson

Cannabis, schizophrenia and genetics with Emma Johnson

Dr Emma Johnson talks to Rob Calder about shared genetic liabilities for cannabis use disorder and schizophrenia and the role of tobacco smoking. Dr Johnson talks about the implications of this resear...

14 Jun 202116min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
jss
liberal-halvtime
forskningno
rekommandert
sinnsyn
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-paradigmepodden
villmarksliv
rss-overskuddsliv
tidlose-historier
fjellsportpodden
nevropodden
rss-inn-til-kjernen-med-sunniva-rose
nordnorsk-historie
dekodet-2
kvinnehelsepodden
rss-nysgjerrige-norge
diagnose