| Literature DB >> 30127762 |
Hsin-Yi Wang1, Leif Sigerson1, Hongyan Jiang2, Cecilia Cheng1.
Abstract
There has been a growing concern of excessive smartphone use that interferes with people's daily functioning, most notably among youngsters. The Smartphone Addiction Inventory (SPAI) was constructed to assess this type of information technology addiction. Although the SPAI was developed in a Taiwanese adolescent sample, this measure has not been validated on Chinese youngsters in other regions. Moreover, the initial evidence yielded a four-factor structure, but recent findings obtained an alternative five-factor structure. As no studies have systematically compared these two factor structures, which of the models fits the data better remained unknown. This study aimed to evaluate the empirical validity of both the four- and five-factor structures of the SPAI in a sample of university students from Mainland China (n = 463). Four psychometric properties of the SPAI were examined. First, the structural validity of both factor models was evaluated with confirmatory factor analysis. Satisfactory fit was found for both the five-factor model (RMSEA = 0.06, SRMR = 0.05, CFI = 0.99, TLI = 0.99) and the four-factor model (RMSEA = 0.07, SRMR = 0.06, CFI = 0.98, TLI = 0.98), but the five-factor model demonstrated an overall better model fit. Second, the five-factor model yielded good internal consistencies (all Cronbach α's > 0.70). Third, concurrent validity of the SPAI was supported by its moderately strong correlations with four widely adopted criterion variables (i.e., loneliness, social anxiety, depression, and impulsivity). Lastly, the convergent validity of the SPAI was demonstrated by its strong, positive correlation with a popular, validated measure of Internet addiction. This study is the first to demonstrate the validity of the newly proposed five-factor model of the SPAI in a sample of Mainland Chinese youngsters.Entities:
Keywords: factor analysis; mobile phone; psychometric properties; scale validation; smartphone addiction; technology addiction
Year: 2018 PMID: 30127762 PMCID: PMC6088307 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01411
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Pearson zero-order correlation analyses for the SPAI-I and its five subscales.
| SPAI-I sum score | Time spent | Compulsivity | Daily-life interference | Craving | Sleep interference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Internet addiction | 0.75∗∗ | 0.64∗∗ | 0.65∗∗ | 0.71∗∗ | 0.63∗∗ | 0.64∗∗ |
| Loneliness | 0.34∗∗ | 0.29∗∗ | 0.29∗∗ | 0.33∗∗ | 0.25∗∗ | 0.31∗∗ |
| Social anxiety | 0.36∗∗ | 0.33∗∗ | 0.35∗∗ | 0.33∗∗ | 0.31∗∗ | 0.30∗∗ |
| Depression | 0.32∗∗ | 0.27∗∗ | 0.30∗∗ | 0.28∗∗ | 0.25∗∗ | 0.29∗∗ |
| Impulsivity (total) | 0.43∗∗ | 0.36∗∗ | 0.37∗∗ | 0.38∗∗ | 0.35∗∗ | 0.39∗∗ |
| Motor impulsivity | 0.34∗∗ | 0.29∗∗ | 0.31∗∗ | 0.32∗∗ | 0.26∗∗ | 0.31∗∗ |
| Non-planning impulsivity | 0.20∗∗ | 0.14 | 0.12 | 0.18∗∗ | 0.15∗∗ | 0.15∗∗ |
| Attentional impulsivity | 0.38∗∗ | 0.34∗∗ | 0.36∗∗ | 0.30∗∗ | 0.34∗∗ | 0.38∗∗ |
Items of Smartphone Addiction Inventory (English).
| Items | |
|---|---|
| (1) | I was told more than once that I spent too much time on smartphone. |
| (2) | I feel uneasy once I stop smartphone for a certain period of time. |
| (3) | I find that I have been hooking on smartphone longer and longer. |
| (4) | I feel restless and irritable when the smartphone is unavailable. |
| (5) | I feel very vigorous upon smartphone use regardless of the fatigues experienced. |
| (6) | I use smartphone for a longer period of time and spend more money than I had intended. |
| (7) | Although using smartphone has brought negative effects on my interpersonal relationships, the amount of time spent on Internet remains unreduced. |
| (8) | I have slept less than 4 h due to using smartphone more than once. |
| (9) | I have increased substantial amount of time using smartphone per week in recent 3 months. |
| (10) | I feel distressed or down once I cease using smartphone for a certain period of time. |
| (11) | I fail to control the impulse to use smartphone. |
| (12) | I find myself indulged on the smartphone at the cost of hanging out with friends. |
| (13) | I feel aches and soreness in the back or eye discomforts due to excessive smartphone use. |
| (14) | The idea of using smartphone comes as the first thought on mind when wake up each morning. |
| (15) | To use smartphone has exercised certain negative effects on my schoolwork or job performance. |
| (16) | I feel missing something after stopping smartphone for a certain period of time. |
| (17) | My interaction with family members is decreased on account of smartphone use. |
| (18) | My recreational activities are reduced due to smartphone use. |
| (19) | I feel the urge to use my smartphone again right after I stopped using it. |
| (20) | My life would be joyless hadn’t there been smartphone. |
| (21) | Surfing the smartphone has exercised negative effects on my physical health. For example, viewing smartphone when crossing the street; fumbling with one’s smartphone while driving or waiting, and resulted in danger. |
| (22) | I try to spend less time on smartphone, but the efforts were in vain. |
| (23) | I make it a habit to use smartphone and the sleep quality and total sleep time decreased. |
| (24) | I need to spend an increasing amount of time on smartphone to achieve same satisfaction as before. |
| (25) | I can not have meal without smartphone use. |
| (26) | I feel tired on daytime due to late-night use of smartphone. |
Items of Smartphone Addiction Inventory (Chinese).