| Literature DB >> 30784392 |
Konstantinos Ioannidis1, Roxanne Hook2, Anna E Goudriaan3, Simon Vlies4, Naomi A Fineberg5, Jon E Grant6, Samuel R Chamberlain7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Excessive use of the internet is increasingly recognised as a global public health concern. Individual studies have reported cognitive impairment in problematic internet use (PIU), but have suffered from various methodological limitations. Confirmation of cognitive deficits in PIU would support the neurobiological plausibility of this disorder. AIMS: To conduct a rigorous meta-analysis of cognitive performance in PIU from case-control studies; and to assess the impact of study quality, the main type of online behaviour (for example gaming) and other parameters on the findings.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioral addiction; internet addiction; internet gaming disorder; meta-analysis; problematic internet use
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30784392 PMCID: PMC6949138 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.2019.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychiatry ISSN: 0007-1250 Impact factor: 9.319
Fig. 1Search strategy followed for meta-analysis.
Total pooled sample sizes and model estimate measures for different cognitive domains
| Domain | Studies, | PIU, total | Control, total | Model estimate (s.e.) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attentional inhibition (Stroop) | 16 | 362 | 361 | 0.53 (0.175) | <0.01 |
| Motor inhibitory control (GNG) | 14 | 330 | 333 | 0.51 (0.167) | <0.001 |
| Motor inhibitory control (SST) | 5 | 149 | 279 | 0.42 (0.12) | <0.001 |
| Decision-making | 7 | 188 | 349 | 0.54 (0.14) | <0.001 |
| Working memory | 4 | 126 | 254 | 0.40 (0.17) | <0.05 |
| Discounting | 4 | 98 | 93 | 1.03 (0.26) | – |
| Total | 40 | 1248 | 1674 | – | – |
PIU, problematic internet use; GNG, go/no-go task; SST, stop-signal task. Some studies analysed more than one domain.
P-values here describe the probability of obtaining the observed model estimates under null hypothesis (no true differences between groups).
Adjusted model estimate after trim and fill method was applied because of publication bias.
Not further analysed because of publication bias and other methodological limitations (see supplementary material 'Discounting' and supplementary Tables 3 and 4.).
Fig. 2Forest plots for (a) motor inhibitory control cognitive domains; and (b) for Stroop inhibitory control, decision-making and working memory cognitive domains.
Fig. 3Funnel plots by cognitive domain.