| Literature DB >> 29904328 |
Lucia Monacis1, Maria Sinatra2, Mark D Griffiths3, Valeria de Palo4.
Abstract
Much research has focused on the validation of psychometric tools assessing Internet addiction. One of the newest measures is the Internet Disorder Scale (IDS-15) based on the modified IGD criteria outlined in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5). This study aimed at investigating the psychometric properties of the Italian version of the IDS-15 by examining the construct and the concurrent and the criterion-related validity and by identifying the taxonomy and the patterns of Internet users. A sample of 471 participants (Mage = 24.72 years, SD = 8.66; 256 males) was recruited from secondary schools, universities, and gaming halls. Confirmatory factor analyses supported the four-dimensional second-order structure and the three levels of the measurement invariance across gender. The reliability and the validity of the scale were confirmed, and the LPAs provided four classes of Internet users on the basis of the scores obtained in all four dimensions of the scale. The psychometric robustness of the Italian version of the IDS-15 was clearly demonstrated. Cross-cultural research should expand and generalize the present findings.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral addiction; IDS-15; Internet addiction; Internet disorder scale; Latent profile analyses; Psychometric properties
Year: 2017 PMID: 29904328 PMCID: PMC5986833 DOI: 10.1007/s11469-017-9823-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Addict ISSN: 1557-1874 Impact factor: 3.836
Mean score and standard deviation of IDS and its four dimensions, BSMAS and IGDS for total sample and gender group
| Mean (SD) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total sample | Females | Males | |
| IDS-15 | 35.95 (11.00) | 35.62 (10.37) | 36.24 (11.53) |
| EDEC | 2.71 (.829) | 2.66 (.78) | 2.75 (.87) |
| WS | 2.20 (.943) | 2.20 (.93) | 2.21 (.95) |
| IDSR | 2.24 (.870) | 2.27 (.82) | 2.21 (.91) |
| DISC | 2.45 (1.050) | 2.36 (.96) | 2.53 (1.13) |
| BSMAS | 13.69 (5.091) | 14.36 (4.76) | 13.13 (5.30) |
| IGDS9-SF | 14.49 (7.463) | 12.32 (5.75) | 16.31 (8.22) |
IDS-15 Internet Disorder Scale, EDEC escapism and dysfunctional emotional coping, WS withdrawal symptoms, IDSR impairments and dysfunctional self-regulation, DISC dysfunctional Internet-related self-control
Goodness-of-fit indices of the four CFAs
| Models |
|
|
| RMSEA | 90% CI | CFI | SRMR | AIC | BIC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 | 1663.800 | 90 | .000 | .196 | .188–.204 | .658 | .104 | 17,484.703 | 17,670.116 |
| Model 2 | 186.956 | 83 | .000 | .052 | .042–0.063 | . 977 | .047 | 16,021.859 | 16,236.115 |
| Model 3 | 189.440 | 85 | .000 | .052 | .042–0.062 | . 977 | .047 | 16,020.343 | 16,226.357 |
Model 1 unidimensional first order, Model 2 four-dimensional first order with two correlated items (item 9 and item 10), Model 3 four-dimensional second-order structure with two correlated items (item 9 and item 10)
Fig. 1Graphical representation of Model 3
Measurement invariance by gender
|
|
| Δ | Δ | Sig. | TLI | CFI | RMSEA | ΔCFI | ΔRMSEA | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Females | 110.997 | 85 | – | – | – | .975 | .980 | .038 | – | – |
| Males | 127.253 | 85 | – | – | – | .972 | .977 | .045 | – | – |
| Configural | 237.602 | 170 | – | – | – | .973 | .978 | .042 | – | – |
| Metric | 249.997 | 181 | 12.40 | 11 | .335 | .974 | .978 | .041 | .000 | .001 |
| Scalar | 261.182 | 192 | 11.19 | 11 | .428 | .976 | .978 | .040 | .000 | .001 |
Reliability coefficients
|
| CR | FD | AVE | MSV | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IDS_15 | .915 | .852 | .935 | .598 | – |
| IDS_EDEC | .757 | .816 | .954 | .565 | .514 |
| IDS_WS | .909 | .909 | .961 | .715 | .544 |
| IDS_IDSR | .835 | .819 | .941 | .540 | .231 |
| IDS_DISC | .916 | .919 | .973 | .791 | .277 |
α Cronbach’s alpha, CR composite reliability, FD factor determinacy, AVE average variance extracted
Bootstrapped correlation matrix with 95% BCa confidence interval between the total score of the IDS-15, its four dimensions, BSMAS, IGDS, age of Internet use initiation, and hours of Internet use
|
| BCa 95% CI |
| |
|---|---|---|---|
| EDEC | .810** | .769–.844 | .66 |
| WS | .886** | .865–.906 | .78 |
| IDSR | .796** | .758–.830 | .63 |
| DISC | .704** | .634–.765 | .49 |
| BSMAS | .705** | .649–.756 | .50 |
| IGDS9-SF | .615** | .520–.694 | .38 |
| Age of Internet use initiation | .065 | −.067–.206 | .00 |
| Hours of Internet use | .286** | .213–.358 | .08 |
r Pearson’s coefficient, R 2 coefficient of determination
**p < .001
Goodness-of-fit indices obtained from the three solutions
| AIC | BIC | SSABIC | Entropy | L-M-R test ( |
| |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 classes | 7549.011 | 7614.936 | 7564.157 | .859 | 785.239 | c1 = 318 |
| 3 classes | 7051.637 | 7142.284 | 7072.463 | .881 | 495.870 | c1 = 144 |
| 4 classes | 4115.767 | 4210.534 | 4137.540 | .867 | 112.042 | c1 = 137 |
Fig. 2The four-class solution obtained from the LPA. C1 low addiction risk, C2 medium addiction risk, C3 high addiction risk, and C4 critical addiction risk