Martha Leticia Gaeta González, Santos Orejudo Hernández, Ana Cebollero-Salinas
{"title":"FoMO和社会情感电子能力作为大学生媒体多任务处理、低头和网络八卦的预测因素:墨西哥和西班牙的跨国性别差异。","authors":"Martha Leticia Gaeta González, Santos Orejudo Hernández, Ana Cebollero-Salinas","doi":"10.1002/jcop.23183","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n <p>There are clear signs of the growing use of the internet across all cultures, which generate new behaviors in the virtual environment such as media multitasking, phubbing, and cybergossip, all associated with online risks and less positive modes of socialization. FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) along with virtual emotional experiences could be relevant predictors, where literature suggests that FoMO is a trigger for problematic social media use, and socio-emotional e-competencies facilitate adaptive behaviors in virtual environments. Hence, understanding which variables predict these phenomena is crucial and whether they can be generalized across different countries. The objective of this study is to analyze whether two dimensions of socio-personal development used to interact in virtual environments, FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) and socio-emotional e-competencies (e-COM), are predictors of different cyberbehaviors (cybergossip, phubbing and media multitasking) in university students from two different countries. It also aims to verify if socio-emotional e-competencies act as a moderator of this relationship. In order to achieve this, we used a sample of 1524 university students from Mexico and Spain (19.74 years old). The results of the path analysis models show that FoMO is the strongest predictor of the three online behaviors regardless of country and gender, especially in the case of phubbing. In addition, socio-emotional e-competencies help to explain the behaviors in a differential way for each country, and the dimension of e-self-control of impulsivity plays a moderating role in FoMO in the case of phubbing and media multitasking. Some differences between countries and genders are discussed.</p>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":15496,"journal":{"name":"Journal of community psychology","volume":"53 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":2.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"FoMO and Socio-Emotional e-Competencies as Predictors of Media Multitasking, Phubbing and Cybergossip in University Students: Transnational Differences Between Mexico and Spain by Gender\",\"authors\":\"Martha Leticia Gaeta González, Santos Orejudo Hernández, Ana Cebollero-Salinas\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/jcop.23183\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div>\\n \\n <p>There are clear signs of the growing use of the internet across all cultures, which generate new behaviors in the virtual environment such as media multitasking, phubbing, and cybergossip, all associated with online risks and less positive modes of socialization. FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) along with virtual emotional experiences could be relevant predictors, where literature suggests that FoMO is a trigger for problematic social media use, and socio-emotional e-competencies facilitate adaptive behaviors in virtual environments. Hence, understanding which variables predict these phenomena is crucial and whether they can be generalized across different countries. The objective of this study is to analyze whether two dimensions of socio-personal development used to interact in virtual environments, FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) and socio-emotional e-competencies (e-COM), are predictors of different cyberbehaviors (cybergossip, phubbing and media multitasking) in university students from two different countries. It also aims to verify if socio-emotional e-competencies act as a moderator of this relationship. In order to achieve this, we used a sample of 1524 university students from Mexico and Spain (19.74 years old). The results of the path analysis models show that FoMO is the strongest predictor of the three online behaviors regardless of country and gender, especially in the case of phubbing. In addition, socio-emotional e-competencies help to explain the behaviors in a differential way for each country, and the dimension of e-self-control of impulsivity plays a moderating role in FoMO in the case of phubbing and media multitasking. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
有明显的迹象表明,在所有文化中,互联网的使用都在不断增加,这在虚拟环境中产生了新的行为,如媒体多任务处理、低头和网络八卦,这些都与网络风险和不太积极的社交模式有关。FoMO(害怕错过)和虚拟情感体验可能是相关的预测因素,文献表明FoMO是社交媒体使用问题的触发因素,而社会情感电子能力促进了虚拟环境中的适应性行为。因此,了解哪些变量可以预测这些现象是至关重要的,以及它们是否可以在不同的国家推广。本研究的目的是分析在虚拟环境中相互作用的社会个人发展的两个维度,FoMO (Fear of Missing Out)和社会情感电子能力(social -emotional e-COM),是否能预测来自两个不同国家的大学生的不同网络行为(网络八卦、phubbing和媒体多任务处理)。它还旨在验证社会情感电子能力是否在这种关系中起调节作用。为了实现这一点,我们使用了来自墨西哥和西班牙的1524名大学生(19.74岁)的样本。路径分析模型的结果显示,无论国家和性别,FoMO都是这三种网络行为的最强预测因子,特别是在低头的情况下。此外,社会情感电子能力有助于以不同的方式解释每个国家的行为,冲动的电子自我控制维度在低头和媒体多任务处理的情况下对FoMO起调节作用。讨论了国家和性别之间的一些差异。
FoMO and Socio-Emotional e-Competencies as Predictors of Media Multitasking, Phubbing and Cybergossip in University Students: Transnational Differences Between Mexico and Spain by Gender
There are clear signs of the growing use of the internet across all cultures, which generate new behaviors in the virtual environment such as media multitasking, phubbing, and cybergossip, all associated with online risks and less positive modes of socialization. FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) along with virtual emotional experiences could be relevant predictors, where literature suggests that FoMO is a trigger for problematic social media use, and socio-emotional e-competencies facilitate adaptive behaviors in virtual environments. Hence, understanding which variables predict these phenomena is crucial and whether they can be generalized across different countries. The objective of this study is to analyze whether two dimensions of socio-personal development used to interact in virtual environments, FoMO (Fear of Missing Out) and socio-emotional e-competencies (e-COM), are predictors of different cyberbehaviors (cybergossip, phubbing and media multitasking) in university students from two different countries. It also aims to verify if socio-emotional e-competencies act as a moderator of this relationship. In order to achieve this, we used a sample of 1524 university students from Mexico and Spain (19.74 years old). The results of the path analysis models show that FoMO is the strongest predictor of the three online behaviors regardless of country and gender, especially in the case of phubbing. In addition, socio-emotional e-competencies help to explain the behaviors in a differential way for each country, and the dimension of e-self-control of impulsivity plays a moderating role in FoMO in the case of phubbing and media multitasking. Some differences between countries and genders are discussed.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Community Psychology is a peer-reviewed journal devoted to research, evaluation, assessment and intervention, and review articles that deal with human behavior in community settings. Articles of interest include descriptions and evaluations of service programs and projects, studies of youth, parenting, and family development, methodology and design for work in the community, the interaction of groups in the larger community, and criminals and corrections.