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Smartphone Addiction among University Students in Light of the COVID-19 Pandemic: Prevalence, Relationship to Academic Procrastination, Quality of Life, Gender and Educational Stage

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TLDR
In this paper , the authors identify the level and proportions of smartphone addiction, and academic procrastination among university students in the light of the Corona pandemic; identify the differences in smartphone addiction and academic Procrastination, and quality of life according to gender and stage of study; and reveal the predictive ability of academic procussion and quality-of-life for smartphone addiction.
Abstract
Abstract: Aims The current study aims to identify the level and proportions of smartphone addiction, and academic procrastination among university students in the light of the Corona pandemic; identify the differences in smartphone addiction, academic procrastination, and quality of life according to gender and stage of study; and revealing the predictive ability of academic procrastination and quality of life for smartphone addiction. Methods: 556 male and female students from Saudi universities participated in the study, whose ages ranged from 18 to 52 years. Measures of academic procrastination and quality of life were used, in addition to the Italian scale of smartphone addiction, which was translated and checked for validity and reliability. Results: The results revealed that 37.4% of the sample were addicted to smartphone use, while 7.7% had a high level of procrastination, and 62.8% had an average level of procrastination. The results did not show statistically significant differences in smartphone addiction and quality of life according to gender and educational stage, while there were statistically significant differences in academic procrastination according to gender in favor of males, and according to stage of education in favor of undergraduate students. The results also revealed a statistically significant positive relationship between academic procrastination and smartphone addiction, and a statistically significant negative relationship between smartphone addiction and quality of life. A negative relationship between quality of life and academic procrastination was found. The results also revealed that addiction to smartphones could be predicted through academic procrastination and quality of life.

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A bidirectional association between smartphone addiction and depression among college students: A cross-lagged panel model

TL;DR: Zhang et al. as mentioned in this paper showed a significant bidirectional association between smartphone addiction and depression among freshmen, but only in the female population, and they applied a cross-lagged panel model approach (CLPM) revealed an association between SA and depression after adjusting for demographic variables.
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Prospective Association between Smartphone Addiction and Perceived Stress and Moderation of Boredom during COVID-19 in China

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the prospective association between smartphone addiction and perceived stress before and during COVID-19, as well as the moderation of boredom, and found that boredom significantly affected smartphone addiction.
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A Positive View of Excessive Smartphone Utilization and Its Relationship With Other Academic-Related Variables Within the Online Course Setting.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the impact of excessive smartphone use, self-regulation, and procrastination on students' online academic performance and found that smartphone use had a significant and positive effect on online students' academic performance.
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Moderating Role of Peer Pressure and Positive Learning Environment Between Career Calling and Academic Procrastination in Chinese Medical Students During Controlled COVID-19 Pandemic: A Cross-Sectional Study

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the relationship and mechanisms among career calling, peer pressure, a positive learning environment, and academic procrastination, and found that career calling is a protective factor that fights against academic postponement and may further improve medical students' mental health and academic achievement.
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