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Internet addiction linked to aggression in teens
Posted on Monday, February 23, 2009 (EST)
Chatting online, playing video games and visiting sexually oriented Web sites could provide opportunities for teens to 'observe, experience and try' aggressive behaviors to get identification in a group, being a hero or winning in games.
 
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Chatting online, playing video games and visiting sexually oriented Web sites could provide opportunities for teens to 'observe, experience and try' aggressive behaviors to get identification in a group, being a hero or winning in games.
© AFP/File Denis Sinyakov

February 23, 2009, (Sawf News) - Chatting online, playing video games and visiting sexually oriented Web sites could provide opportunities for teens to 'observe, experience and try' aggressive behaviors to get identification in a group, being a hero or winning in games.

Armed with the findings of a new study, Taiwanese researchers suggest parents and educators pay more attention to children’s online habits because Internet-addicted teens seem more prone to aggression. However, Americans who study violence are not ready to make any conclusions about a possible link.

The study “does not demonstrate that one behavior caused the other,” said Dewey Cornell, a professor of education at the University of Virginia. Even so, he said, other research shows “that persons who play violent video games will be more prone to have aggressive thoughts, feelings and actions.”

Internet addiction itself remains a controversial topic more than a decade after it was first described. Some mental health specialists refuse to recognize its existence, although a number of rehabilitation centers treat people who say they suffer from it.

In the new study, researchers led by Chih-Hung Ko, M.D., from Kaohsiung Medical University, gave questionnaires to 9,405 adolescents and asked about their Internet activity and behaviors. The study appears online in the Journal of Adolescent Health.

The researchers deemed 25 percent of the male students and 13 percent of females to be Internet addicts based on a commonly used scale.

Thirteen percent of all female students and 32 percent of all males reported engaging in aggressive behavior — such as threatening or hurting others — within the last year, compared with 37 percent of those suffering from Internet addiction.

The researchers, who were not available for comment, wrote in the study that chatting online, playing video games and visiting sexually oriented Web sites could provide opportunities for teens to “observe, experience and try aggressive behaviors resulting in positive outcome, (such as) identification in a group, being a hero or winning in games.”

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