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Zsolt Demetrovics

Researcher at Eötvös Loránd University

Publications -  470
Citations -  18047

Zsolt Demetrovics is an academic researcher from Eötvös Loránd University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Addiction. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 389 publications receiving 12600 citations. Previous affiliations of Zsolt Demetrovics include Gibraltar Hardware & Prevention Institute.

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Work Addiction, Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder, Burn-Out, and Global Burden of Disease: Implications from the ICD-11

TL;DR: This paper identifies several substantial gaps in the current understanding of the relationships between work addiction, OCPD/APD, burn-out, and the global burden of disease within the context of the WHO’s plan of developing evidence-based guidelines on mental wellbeing in the workplace.
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Ten-Item Internet Gaming Disorder Test (IGDT-10): Measurement invariance and cross-cultural validation across seven language-based samples.

TL;DR: The IGDT-10 shows robust psychometric properties and appears suitable for conducting cross-cultural and gender comparisons across seven languages, including language and gender invariance on the level of scalar invariance in a large international sample of online gamers.
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Transition to injecting 3,4-methylene-dioxy-pyrovalerone (MDPV) among needle exchange program participants in Hungary.

TL;DR: The appearance of MDPV on the illegal drug market had a substantial effect on the drug use patterns of the IDU population as well as the purity, price and availability of amphetamine and heroin.
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Potential of an Interactive Drug Prevention Mobile Phone App (Once Upon a High): Questionnaire Study Among Students

TL;DR: The Once Upon a High app can be a useful tool to assist preventive intervention programs by increasing knowledge and self-efficacy; however, its efficacy in reducing or preventing substance use needs to be improved and further studied.
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Why do people watch pornography? The motivational basis of pornography use.

TL;DR: The present work aimed to construct a measure that could reliably assess a wide range of PUM in nonspecific populations and found that sexual pleasure, boredom avoidance, and stress reduction motivations showed positive, weak-to-moderate associations with FPU.