V
Vasileios Stavropoulos
Researcher at Victoria University, Australia
Publications - 102
Citations - 1633
Vasileios Stavropoulos is an academic researcher from Victoria University, Australia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Confirmatory factor analysis. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 71 publications receiving 912 citations. Previous affiliations of Vasileios Stavropoulos include University of Tasmania & National and Kapodistrian University of Athens.
Papers
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Internet use and Problematic Internet Use: a systematic review of longitudinal research trends in adolescence and emergent adulthood
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic literature review is presented to map the longitudinal research in the field of Internet Use and Problematic Internet Use (PIU) in adolescents and emergent adults.
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Beyond "Facebook Addiction": The Role of Cognitive-Related Factors and Psychiatric Distress in Social Networking Site Addiction.
TL;DR: The results indicated that FoMo significantly predicted SNS addiction and accounted for about 61% of the total variance in S NS addiction, with FoMo providing the strongest predictive contribution over and above the effects of sociodemographic variables and patterns of SNS use.
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A Systematic Review of the Co-occurrence of Gaming Disorder and Other Potentially Addictive Behaviors
TL;DR: In this paper, a systematic review was conducted to determine the co-occurrence of potentially addictive behaviors with problematic and disordered games, and elucidate the potential risk factors in the development and maintenance of cooccurrence within disordered gaming.
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The longitudinal association between anxiety and Internet addiction in adolescence: the moderating effect of classroom extraversion
Vasileios Stavropoulos,Vasileios Stavropoulos,Rapson Gomez,Eloisa Steen,Charlotte L. Beard,Lucas W. L. Liew,Mark D. Griffiths +6 more
TL;DR: Higher levels of anxiety were significantly associated with higher IA behaviors, however, it tended to weaken within classrooms higher in extraversion, indicating that the contribution of individual IA risk factors might differently unfold within different contexts.
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Age of Initiation and Internet Gaming Disorder: The Role of Self-Esteem
Charlotte L. Beard,Amie L. Haas,Robert E. Wickham,Vasileios Stavropoulos,Vasileios Stavropoulos +4 more
TL;DR: Support is provided regarding the inclusion of self-esteem factors in the link between early use and IGD, as earlier age predicted overall IGD symptom severity and high gaming-contingent self-worth was associated with more negative outcomes.