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Ofir Turel

Researcher at California State University, Fullerton

Publications -  251
Citations -  9477

Ofir Turel is an academic researcher from California State University, Fullerton. The author has contributed to research in topics: Addiction & Information system. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 219 publications receiving 7236 citations. Previous affiliations of Ofir Turel include California State University & Information Technology University.

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Panel report: the dark side of the digitization of the individual

TL;DR: The authors introduce the topic of the dark sides of DOTI and point readers to promising research directions and methodologies for further exploring this relatively uncharted field of research.
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Too busy to help: Antecedents and outcomes of interactional justice in web-based service encounters

TL;DR: Key factors that drive intentions to continue using web-based live-chat support services and to provide positive word-of-mouth are examined, and it is suggested that these outcomes are increased through interactional justice perceptions, which are diminished by the perceived busyness of the service provider.
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Social Networking Site Use While Driving: ADHD and the Mediating Roles of Stress, Self-Esteem and Craving

TL;DR: SNS use while driving may be more prevalent than previously assumed and may be indirectly associated with ADHD symptoms, and prevention and reduction interventions that target the mediating perceptions and states should be devised.
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Strategies for self-controlling social media use: Classification and role in preventing social media addiction symptoms

TL;DR: The present findings revealed that strategies for self-controlling SNS use are common and complex and their theoretical and clinical significance stems from their ability to prevent the translation of poor trait self-control and strong S NS use habit to the emergence of excessive use as manifested in SNS addiction-like symptoms.
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Effects of motor impulsivity and sleep quality on swearing, interpersonally deviant and disadvantageous behaviors on online social networking sites

TL;DR: In this article, a time-lagged study involving 384 young adults from the US who use social networking sites was conducted, and structural equation modeling analyses revealed that motor impulsivity drives some problematic online behaviors, and poor sleep quality does not directly influence these behaviors.