Z
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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Exercise Addiction and Personality: a Two-Decade Systematic Review of the Empirical Literature (1995–2016)
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors found that perfectionism and narcissism are associated with exercise addiction and that the association is stronger in the presence of obsessive-compulsiveness, while other factors (e.g., anger, hostility, anxiety, depression, and dysfunctional psychological regulation) appear to be associated with addiction.
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A two-study validation of a single-item measure of relationship satisfaction: RAS-1
Flóra Fülöp,Beáta Bőthe,Beáta Bőthe,Éva Gál,Julie Youko Anne Cachia,Zsolt Demetrovics,Gábor Orosz,Gábor Orosz +7 more
TL;DR: The authors examined the similarities and differences between the seven-item Relationship Assessment Scale (RAS) and the single-item measure of relationship satisfaction, using proximal and distal constructs as correlates.
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Gaming Disorder Is a Disorder due to Addictive Behaviors: Evidence from Behavioral and Neuroscientific Studies Addressing Cue Reactivity and Craving, Executive Functions, and Decision-Making
Matthias Brand,Matthias Brand,Hans-Jürgen Rumpf,Zsolt Demetrovics,Daniel L. King,Marc N. Potenza,Elisa Wegmann +6 more
TL;DR: Theoretical models that aim to explain the development and maintenance of gaming disorder focus on cue reactivity and craving as well as on reduced inhibitory control processes and dysfunctional decision-making as core processes underlying symptoms of game disorder as discussed by the authors.
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Online and offline video game use in adolescents: measurement invariance and problem severity.
Máté Smohai,Róbert Urbán,Mark D. Griffiths,Orsolya Király,Zsuzsanna Mirnics,András Vargha,Zsolt Demetrovics +6 more
TL;DR: The results of the present study suggest that online and offline gaming can be assessed using the same psychometric instrument and identify important structural features about how online andOffline gaming might contribute differently to problematic use.
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Gambling in Western and Eastern Europe: The Example of Hungary
TL;DR: The goal of this study was to systematically review all European epidemiological studies related to excessive gambling in the general adult population, and to provide an overview of the state of gambling in Hungary based on the first ever nationwide representative survey, set against the backdrop of the earlier European studies.