Social Networking Addiction Scale

Social networking is the new norm of the society as many of us remain “online” 24*7. However, excessive use of it would result in social networking addiction. There are some existing tools to measure social networking addiction but all of them suffer from conceptual or/and methodological problems. T...

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Main Authors: M. G. Shahnawaz, Usama Rehman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-12-01
Series:Cogent Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2020.1832032
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spelling doaj-0b1c77fc982541408f34259111a960702021-08-09T18:41:17ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Psychology2331-19082020-12-017110.1080/23311908.2020.18320321832032Social Networking Addiction ScaleM. G. Shahnawaz0Usama Rehman1Jamia Millia IslamiaAligarh Muslim UniversitySocial networking is the new norm of the society as many of us remain “online” 24*7. However, excessive use of it would result in social networking addiction. There are some existing tools to measure social networking addiction but all of them suffer from conceptual or/and methodological problems. The present research aimed at developing a theoretically and psychometrically sound tool to assess social networking addiction by conducting three different studies. Study 1 established the factor structure of the social networking addiction scale as a higher-order construct having six first-level factors. In study 2, we found that social networking is a relatively enduring characteristic as test-retest reliability was found to be. 88 in a time span of 25 days. Study 3 was conducted to establish the convergent and divergent validity of the social networking addiction scale (SNAS). Problematic internet use, Facebook addiction, average time spent on the internet daily and loneliness were chosen to test the convergent validity of SNAS, while life satisfaction was used to test the divergent validity. The result establishes the convergent and divergent validity of SNAS. The scale situated nicely between problematic internet and Facebook addictions as it shared 53% of the variance with the former and 25% with the later.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2020.1832032social networking addictionbehavioral addictionconfirmatory factor analysisconvergent and divergent validity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. G. Shahnawaz
Usama Rehman
spellingShingle M. G. Shahnawaz
Usama Rehman
Social Networking Addiction Scale
Cogent Psychology
social networking addiction
behavioral addiction
confirmatory factor analysis
convergent and divergent validity
author_facet M. G. Shahnawaz
Usama Rehman
author_sort M. G. Shahnawaz
title Social Networking Addiction Scale
title_short Social Networking Addiction Scale
title_full Social Networking Addiction Scale
title_fullStr Social Networking Addiction Scale
title_full_unstemmed Social Networking Addiction Scale
title_sort social networking addiction scale
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Psychology
issn 2331-1908
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Social networking is the new norm of the society as many of us remain “online” 24*7. However, excessive use of it would result in social networking addiction. There are some existing tools to measure social networking addiction but all of them suffer from conceptual or/and methodological problems. The present research aimed at developing a theoretically and psychometrically sound tool to assess social networking addiction by conducting three different studies. Study 1 established the factor structure of the social networking addiction scale as a higher-order construct having six first-level factors. In study 2, we found that social networking is a relatively enduring characteristic as test-retest reliability was found to be. 88 in a time span of 25 days. Study 3 was conducted to establish the convergent and divergent validity of the social networking addiction scale (SNAS). Problematic internet use, Facebook addiction, average time spent on the internet daily and loneliness were chosen to test the convergent validity of SNAS, while life satisfaction was used to test the divergent validity. The result establishes the convergent and divergent validity of SNAS. The scale situated nicely between problematic internet and Facebook addictions as it shared 53% of the variance with the former and 25% with the later.
topic social networking addiction
behavioral addiction
confirmatory factor analysis
convergent and divergent validity
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/23311908.2020.1832032
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