M
Maèva Flayelle
Researcher at University of Luxembourg
Publications - 27
Citations - 532
Maèva Flayelle is an academic researcher from University of Luxembourg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 15 publications receiving 243 citations. Previous affiliations of Maèva Flayelle include University of Lausanne & Université catholique de Louvain.
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Journal ArticleDOI
High Involvement Versus Pathological Involvement in Video Games: a Crucial Distinction for Ensuring the Validity and Utility of Gaming Disorder
TL;DR: Available evidence supports the crucial need to distinguish between high and pathological involvement in video games, in order to avoid overdiagnosis and pathologization of normal behavior.
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Assessing binge-watching behaviors: Development and validation of the “Watching TV Series Motives” and “Binge-Watching Engagement and Symptoms” questionnaires
Maèva Flayelle,Natale Canale,Claus Vögele,Laurent Karila,Pierre Maurage,Joël Billieux,Joël Billieux +6 more
TL;DR: Two original assessment instruments, assessing TV series watching motives and binge-watching engagement and symptoms, respectively are developed and validated and suggest good psychometric properties for both scales.
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Toward a qualitative understanding of binge-watching behaviors: A focus group approach.
TL;DR: The research should go beyond the classic biomedical and psychological models of addictive behaviors to account for binge-watching in order to explore its specificities and generate the first steps toward an adequate theoretical rationale for these emerging problematic behaviors.
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Binge-Watching: What Do we Know So Far? A First Systematic Review of the Evidence
Maèva Flayelle,Pierre Maurage,Kim Ridell Di Lorenzo,Claus Vögele,Sally M. Gainsbury,Joël Billieux,Joël Billieux +6 more
TL;DR: The authors provided the first systematic review of the evidence regarding this increasingly widespread behavior, concluding that binge-watching remains an ill-defined construct as no consensus exists on its operationalization and measurement.
Journal ArticleDOI
Time for a plot twist: Beyond confirmatory approaches to binge-watching research.
TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative understanding of the phenomenological and behavioral characteristics of binge-watching behavior is presented, based on a model involving emotion regulation in the etiology and maintenance of problem binge watching.