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         Internet Addiction:     more books (101)
  1. Internet addiction: college student case study using best practices in cognitive behavior therapy.: An article from: Journal of Mental Health Counseling by Alex S. Hall, Jeffrey Parsons, 2001-10-01
  2. Online Games: Spore, the 39 Clues, Online Poker, 1 Vs. 100, Lag, War of Internet Addiction, Rotohog, Online Text-Based Role-Playing Game
  3. Sex and love addiction on the Internet: employers and EA professionals need to see minor sexual and relationship problems as probably indicative of larger ... from: The Journal of Employee Assistance by Eric Griffin-Shelley, 2009-04-01
  4. Wired February 2010 The New Industrial Revolution, Bullet Trains, Murder at an Internet Addiction Camp, Ben Huh, The Data-Driven Future of American Medicine
  5. Problematic Internet use or Internet addiction? [An article from: Computers in Human Behavior] by P.M. Yellowlees, S. Marks, 2007-05-01
  6. Prevalence of internet addiction and correlations with family factors among South Korean adolescents.(Report): An article from: Adolescence by Soo Kyung Park, Jae Yop Kim, et all 2008-12-22
  7. ADHD, hostility predicted Internet addiction.(BEHAVIORAL PEDIATRICS): An article from: Pediatric News by Mary Ann Moon, 2009-12-01
  8. Internet addiction: what once was parody may soon be diagnosis.(Columns): An article from: Reason by Greg Beato, 2010-08-01
  9. Atrapados en la Red.(adicción a la internet)(TT: Trapped in the Internet.)(TA: Internet addiction)(Artículo Breve): An article from: Epoca by Mayka Paniagua, 2001-11-30
  10. Internet Addiction by Garth Gilmartin, 2003
  11. 21st Century Addictions and Obsessions (Postmodern Library Series, Volume 3) by Postmodern Library, 2007
  12. Internet addiction disorder: An entry from Thomson Gale's <i>Gale Encyclopedia of Mental Disorders</i> by Keith, Psy.D. Beard, 2003
  13. The effects of parental monitoring and leisure boredom on adolescents' Internet addiction.: An article from: Adolescence by Chien-Hsin Lin, Shong-Lin Lin, et all 2009-12-22

41. Mental Help Net - Internet Addiction
Case study with references, and annotated list of links with ratings.
http://www.mentalhelp.net/poc/center_index.php?id=66

42. Internet Addiction
If help is what you seek, we hope you'll find it here. Please Support Our Sponsorsinternet addiction Please Support Our Partners. internet addiction
http://www.soberrecovery.com/links/internetaddiction.html
Help and Information for Alcoholism, Addictions and Mental Health
loc="http://soberrecovery.com/sobermenu2/"
Get from Hazelden Books and Recovery Gifts
Search for Treatment Centers and Meetings, Support Groups, Adolescent Services and Detox Centers Recovery Help and Information Starts Here
Internet Addiction
Information-Help-Support
Internet Addiction
A help resource for people with Internet addiction and their families, based on the work of Internet behavior expert Richard Davis.
http://www.internetaddiction.ca

more recovery resources...
Center for On-Line and Internet Addiction - Help and Resource for Internet
We offer therapy for Internet-addicts and their families as well as comprehensive resources on Internet Addiction. Also a bookstore, message boards, research articles, referrals and self-tests.
http://www.netaddiction.com
Computer Addiction Services
Computer Addiction Services Maressa Hecht Orzack, Ph.D. McLean Hospital 115 Mill Street Belmont, MA 02478 617-855-2908 Photo by Kris Snibbe 10 Langley Road Suite 200 Newton Centre, MA 02459 617-332-6
http://www.computeraddiction.com

43. Internet Addiction Pamphlet
For further information or online help, the following Internet addresses may be usefulhttp//www.netaddiction.com http//www.virtualaddiction.com/ While we
http://www.bloomfield.edu/counselor/Netadd.htm

44. Internet Addiction
internet addiction A Growing Phenomenon on Our Campuses. Gender does seem to influencethe types of applications and underlying reasons for internet addiction.
http://www.counseling.swt.edu/internet_addiction.htm
Internet Addiction: A Growing Phenomenon on Our Campuses Internet addiction? Sounds unlikely, right? How can the use of a positive, dynamic force like the Internet become a negative, debilitating factor in someone’s life. Simple. Just like the use of food, the drinking of alcohol, or the purchasing of material things can escalate into misuse and abuse, so can one’s interest in and preoccupation with using the Internet become an addiction. Let’s take a look at several key facets of this developing phenomenon of Internet Addiction, starting with a basic definition which is taken from Dr. Kimberly B. Young’s book Caught in the Net. What is Internet Addiction? Internet Addiction is a broad term covering a wide-variety of behaviors and impulse control problems. It is important to understand that there are at least five specific types of Internet addiction: Cybersexual Addiction (addictions to adult chat rooms or cyberporn). Cyber-relationship Addiction (online friendships made in chat rooms, MUDs, or newsgroups that replace real-life friends and family, this also includes the issue of cyberaffairs).

45. Web Citation - 99.09.09
Greenfield also happens to run a clinic for treating internet addiction. .I've seen the internet addiction story surface year after year.
http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/citation/wc990909.htm
Previously in Web Citations:
Mirror, Mirror

The Blair Witch Project and the Net's latest exercise in self-flattery. By Josh Ozersky
The Net's Next Vice

Online gambling is set to take off. Enter (who else?) the United States government. By Katie Bacon
The Great Divide

The Silicon Valley rich are very different from you and me. By Wen Stephenson
Sim City

The virtual partition of Jerusalem is a fait accompli. By Eric Manch
Politics Made Simple

A new political site aims for the GenX mind and shows us what the world does not need now. By Nicholas Confessore Front Runners Presidential campaigns are starting earlier and earlier. Here's how the field is shaping up for 2024. By Toby Lester Menace to Society The hype isn't the most annoying thing about the new Star Wars release. By Gina Hahn See the complete Web Citations Index The Addiction Addiction September 9, 1999 A pproximately eleven million people around the world are Internet addicts, according to a paper presented by Dr. David Greenfield at the 1999 meeting of the American Psychological Association last month. "Marriages are being disrupted, kids are getting into trouble, people are committing illegal acts, people are spending too much money. As someone who treats patients, I see it," Dr. Greenfield told the Associated Press . Greenfield also happens to run a clinic for treating "Internet addiction."

46. CyberAddicts.net - Internet Addiction
A source of information about internet addiction, overuse, and pathologyonline. CyberAddicts.net TUTORIALS, internet addiction. Almost
http://www.cyberaddicts.net/Psychology/index.shtml
Cyber Addicts.net
TUTORIALS
HOME
SITE MAP CONTACT US ADVERTISE Cyber Addicts.net
TUTORIALS
JAVASCRIPT

VIRTUAL REALITY

SSI

HTML
...
CGI

RESOURCES
CGI SCRIPTS
JAVA APPLETS TOOLS DROP DOWN MENU POP UP WINDOW SCREEN REDIRECT MORE TOOLS.... ARTICLES WEBMASTER ARTICLES ROUTING ALGORITHMS BUILD YOUR OWN PC INTERNET ADDICTION ... COMPUTER ARTICLES SITE SITE MAP CONTACT US SPONSOR US OUR HOST INTERNET ADDICTION A
lmost 6 percent of Internet users suffer from some form of addiction to it, according to the largest study of Web surfers ever conducted. The findings, which were released at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, appear likely to bolster the expanding acceptance of compulsive Internet use as a real psychological disorder. H owever, the 6 percent figure is lower that some estimates of 10 percent or more stemming largely from research on college students. With an estimated 200 million Internet users worldwide, that would mean that 11.4 million are addicts. W e've all joked about being online for too long, or getting addicted to the net, but could it be that you really are ADDICTED TO THE NET. Its not something to laugh about, but something that has become a serious issue over the recent years, specially with the internet becoming so widely available. On the next few pages are more information about exactly what internet addiction is...and the psychological side of this man-made disorder. Click here to do a test to determine if YOU are addicted to the Internet.

47. UMCP Counseling Center -- SELF-HELP: Internet Addiction
SELFHELP internet addiction. Getting Caught in the 'Net. The Center also providesindividual counseling for internet addiction as well as many other issues.
http://www.inform.umd.edu/CampusInfo/Departments/Counseling/Selfhelp/sh_netad.ht
SELF-HELP: Internet Addiction
Getting Caught in the 'Net
It is 3:30 a.m..
You've been staring into the computer screen since you got home at 5. Or was that yesterday?...
You're English paper is due at 10, but the teacher "won't mind" if you turn it in on Monday. You started the semester off well, but your grades in the class are slipping. In fact all your grades are falling, just like last semester.
You should go to sleep, but Pat may show up again in the chat room. Pat seems to be the only one who understands you these days. Or maybe you'll just surf the 'Net for awhile and check in later. Does this sound familiar? Do you seem to be spending more and more time online, getting less work done, becoming more involved with cyberfriends than flesh-and-blood ones? You may be getting "caught in the 'Net." Many people find it hard to believe that using the computer can be a problem for them. It helps you be productive, it's entertaining, it's interesting; but addictive? Studies have shown that an increasing number of students go beyond functional use of computers and the 'Net to the point of failing courses, losing jobs, damaging relationships, and even flunking out of school altogether. And these are not just "marginal" students; high-achieving students are just as susceptible, perhaps more susceptible. Using the internet is like other potentially compulsive activities, such as gambling, exercise

48. Internet Addiction On Campus: The Vulnerability Of College Students
Inc. internet addiction on Campus The Vulnerability of College Students.JONATHAN J. KANDELL, Ph.D. ABSTRACT. internet addiction. For
http://www.inform.umd.edu/CampusInfo/Departments/Counseling/Personal/~kandell/ia

Volume 1, Number 1, 1998
Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
Internet Addiction on Campus:
The Vulnerability of College Students
JONATHAN J. KANDELL, Ph.D.
ABSTRACT
M CLUHAN CONTENDED THAT a medium or a technology forces society and the individual to adapt to it, rather than people adapting the technology to the current world.( ) In other words, each significant technological development fundamentally changes the way the world works. Just as the invention of the electric light enabled a multitude of nocturnal activities to occur and the VCR created an entire industry of video retailers, the development of the Internet and World Wide Web have spawned a revolution in communication, commerce, and interpersonal behavior. Use of the Internet on college and university campuses has shown explosive growth in the last few years, paralleling, if not outpacing, the strong advances in the society at large. While academia always has been in the forefront of Internet use, the primary focus had been on faculty research and communication. Since the advent of high-quality, low-cost hardware and software, and the development of a graphically based, easy-to-use method of accessing remote computer sites (i.e., the World Wide Web), use of the Internet by students has increased dramatically. Many campuses are now finding that a student culture is being created via E-mail, Web surfing, multiple user dungeons (MUDS; interactive, role-playing games), and homepage production. Many students provide E-mail addresses as the preferred mode of contact rather than telephone numbers. Although the Internet can be a powerful tool for both academic study and personal communication, for some people Internet access can prove to be a temptation that is hard to resist. Pathological or problematic use of the Internet, also called "Internet addiction," is a behavior pattern that appears to be affecting more and more people, including students.

49. Internet Addiction
internet addiction. The World Wide Web is informative, convenient, andfun. There are people's lives. Symptoms of internet addiction
http://www.indianchild.com/internet_addiction.htm
web hosting provided by Direct i Internet Addiction The World Wide Web is informative, convenient, and fun. There are varying opinions on the subject of Internet addiction. Some say that the Internet can be addicting, to the point that it disturbs one's life and the lives of those around him. Others say that there is no such thing as Internet Addiction Disorder getting pleasure out of a computer is not the same as getting pleasure from cocaine or any other drug. Whether there is or is not a bona fide disorder, the Internet is disrupting many people's lives. Symptoms of Internet Addiction : 1) Using the online services everyday without any skipping.
2) Loosing track of time after making a connection.
3) Goes out less and less.
4) Spending less and less time on meals at home or at work, and eats in front of the monitor.
5) Denying spending too much time on the Net.
6) Others complaining of your too much time in front of the monitor.
7) Checking on your mailbox too many times a day.

50. TechTV | What Is Internet Addiction?
internet addiction affects 5 to 10 percent of all online users. WhatIs internet addiction? You can get help for your Net addiction.
http://www.techtv.com/callforhelp/features/story/0,24330,3322433,00.html
Search: Join TechTV Member Services Site Help Get TechTV You are here: Home TV Shows Call for Help Features What Is Internet Addiction? document.write(nav); Call for Help
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Call for Help: Become a Master of Technology
Weekdays at 3 p.m. Eastern
What Is Internet Addiction?
You can get help for your Net addiction.
By Dr. Kimberly Young , Cyberpsychologist
Printer-friendly format
Email this story Video Highlight Are you addicted to the Net? Internet addiction affects 5 to 10 percent of all online users. Treatment centers across the country and abroad have already developed specialty rehabilitation programs to address recovery. How can you tell if you are addicted? Internet addiction warning signs
  • Do you feel preoccupied with the Internet? (i.e. Do you think about previous online activity or anticipate your next online session?)
  • Do you feel the need to use the Internet with increasing amounts of time in order to achieve satisfaction?
  • Have you repeatedly made unsuccessful efforts to control, cut back, or stop Internet use?
  • Do you feel restless, moody, depressed, or irritable when attempting to cut down or stop Internet use?
  • 51. Internet Addiction Signs
    If you, your spouse, family member or friend demonstrates any one of these DangerSigns of internet addiction, the Covenant Eyes Internet Accountability
    http://www.covenanteyes.com/addictionsigns_old.php
    DANGER SIGNS OF INTERNET ADDICTIONS:
    Have your family or friends complained about the amount of time you spend online? Are you less involved with your spouse or friends because of your involvement with the Internet? Have you lied to your spouse or family members about your Internet usage? Do you feel estrangement in your relationship with God because of your involvement with the Internet (pornography, gambling, etc.)? Do you avoid social engagements or try to leave such engagements early in order to spend more time on the Internet? Do you hide your Internet involvement from your spouse or family members? Do you, your spouse, or family members stay up late, after everyone has gone to bed, so you can log onto the Internet privately? Have you, your spouse or a family member experienced an increase in moodiness, anger and harsh blaming? Have you, your spouse or family member tried to stop your involvement with the Internet, but have been unable to do so? Many people find that overcoming these temptations is virtually impossible on their own. Developing a relationship with another person who can hold them accountable is the most effective way to obtain help. That's why

    52. U.S. News: Internet Addiction (8/28/00)
    Cover story 8/28/00. internet addiction Base instincts. By Joannie Fischer. Theirsis a modern love drama They met on the Internet and fell head over heels.
    http://www.usnews.com/usnews/nycu/tech/articles/000828/nycu/addiction.htm
    Education Health Opinion Technology Best of the Web Life Online Gadgets Privacy Washington Whispers News Briefings News Quiz Photography ... Market@usnews
    Cover story 8/28/00
    Internet addiction: Base instincts
    By Joannie Fischer
    It was purely by accident, Kevin says, that he discovered online pornography. First he looked out of curiosity. "Each time I thought I had seen it all," he says, "some new sexual practice popped up. Eventually, the online sexual world came to take the place of any real-world contact with women. "I can be a little bit shy," he says, "and this was a substitute that kept me from feeling lonely." Then came a message from "Marie," a young mother of three looking for companionship on an Internet singles site. Kevin fired off an immediate response, and the two began a dialogue that would last two months before he made the 50-mile drive to meet her. A few months later, they were married. What Marie loved about Kevin was his kindness, his interest in her kids. What she -didn't know was that every time she was reading one of Kevin's love E-mails, he was at the other end of the connection peering at lewd pornography sites. "I knew he was always online," Marie says. "But I thought that it was just because he was interested in meeting new people." Whenever Kevin was home, he was online, with the door closed. A few times, he called her in to look at an especially "wild" site. She was disgusted but didn't worry-until he turned away from her in bed. "Have you been looking again?" she would cry.

    53. Internet Addiction
    internet addiction from a narrative psychology point of view. potentialto succeed. Status of internet addiction. On consequence of
    http://home.mira.net/~kmurray/psych/moscow.html
    Internet addiction from a narrative psychology point of view
    Home
    Narrative Psych
    Other texts: This paper examines Internet addiction from the perspective of narrative psychology. A brief sketch of this perspective is necessary before proceeding.
    Narrative psychology
    A narrative understanding of human behaviour attends to the meanings negotiated around action, ranging from routine accounting to tall tales. This semiotic approach borrows primarily from the literary field in analysing these meanings. An often-used literary device in narrative psychology is the schema of four mythoi, developed by Northrop Frye. According to this literary theorist, narrative structures proceed in a cycle that includes romance, comedy, tragedy and satire. In romance, the individual triumphs over adversity and a new order is instituted. By contrast, in comedy the individual gives way to the group, which is refreshed by overcoming dissent. In tragedy, an individual cannot return to this world from the ordeal. And as a catchall category, in satire the preceding three myths are shown to be unrealistic. The four mythoi offer interpretations of episodes in which individual and group encounter threats to their existence. In the case of Internet addiction, a narrative approach attends to the implicit stories that are used to make sense of this phenomenon. This paper divides into two parts. The first part examines the meanings attached to the online experience. The second part views some of the narrative structures that contain the addiction phenomenon.

    54. Internet Addiction - Is The Internet Addictive, Or Are Addicts Using The Interne
    Paper by Storm A. King, that provides an overview of current research findings, and explanations of IAD.Category Health Addictions Internet...... Factors inherent in online interactivity that might be contributing to developinginternet addiction Disorder (IAD) are distinguished from factors inherent in
    http://webpages.charter.net/stormking/iad.html
    Is the Internet Addictive, or Are Addicts Using the Internet?
    By Storm A. King
    December, 1996
    Cite as:
    King, S. A. (1996). Is the Internet Addictive, or Are Addicts Using the Internet? Retrieved [fill in todays date here] from the World Wide Web: http://www.concentric.net/~Astorm/iad.html
    Abstract
    What makes the Internet attractive? What is Internet Addiction? Who Gets Addicted? ... References Abstract Recent research shows that some users of the Internet spend so much time logged on, that their personal and/or professional life suffers. This finding is corroborated by numerous anecdotal accounts of people becoming "hooked" on on-line interactivity, accounts that have circulated in on-line discussions as well as in real life settings. It is becoming common to know of someone, or have heard of someone, that has become enamored with on-line activity to the point that they ignore important personal responsibilities. This paper is an overview of current research findings, and an attempt to explore some of the possible explanations for this phenomena. Factors inherent in on-line interactivity that might be contributing to developing Internet Addiction Disorder (IAD) are distinguished from factors inherent in the people proposed to be most at risk for, or suffering from, IAD. Recommendations for treatment of affected individuals are offered. What makes the Internet attractive?

    55. The Online Internet Addicts' Support Group
    AA Frannie's Links; Recovery Resources Online internet addiction. News- Log on, Tune, Drop Out 3/29/99; News - Internet an addiction?
    http://penn.home.att.net/addict.htm
    The Online Internet Addicts' Support Group
    Surfing on the Internet: A Nethead's Adventures Online , Little, Brown, and Co., 1995 (pp. 288-293) "This is your brain." Picture of a potted gerber daisy. "This is your brain on Net." Picture of gerber daisy blossom garroted from its stem and tossed into a food processor with pickling brine, soap-bubble formula, and the contents of 42 pixie stix. Sound of food processor on high setting. "Any questions?" I sit, rapt, absorbed by a chilling QVC psychodrama. Lorena Bobbitt, having lashed Billy Idol to the kitchen sink with Topsy Tail hair tools, brandishes a Flowbie and threatens to dismember him for whorishly appropriating the term "cyberpunk." And after a few hours of mass media flotsam piped direct to my brain, a kind intellectual tinnitus sets in. This is the point when I sit back, my mind ringing with Blade Runner trivia, and ponder the ethics of nanotechnology experiments on household pets. I squint, rub my temples, and groan with the agony of mental indigestion. Aaarrghhhh, my brain hurts... Dammit Jim! Log off Jim! Log off!

    56. Internet Addiction Report
    Part 1 internet addiction truth or myth? By Michael Karlsson. internet addictionis something that has been talked about a lot in media lately.
    http://www.jmk.su.se/global/global98/private/michael/research/netaddict.htm
    Part 1:
    Internet addiction - truth or myth?
    By Michael Karlsson
    Internet addiction is something that has been talked about a lot in media lately. But is it a real addiction, or an invention of the media? I decided to try to find out what the experts think, and the obvious way to do so was to dig into all the sources that are available on the www.
    Originally internet addiction was a joke, something the online community made up stories about and laughed at. It was newyorker Ivan Goldberg, M.D., who coined the term "internet addiction disorder" originally, and it was meant to be nothing but a bit of harmless humour.
    This was fine by psychiatrists, as long as noone took it seriously. There were however people who decided to find out if there was any truth to the joke. Dr Kimberly S. Young at the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford was one of these. She started doing her pioneer research on internet addiction in 1996. She handed out questionnairies to people who spent time online, with questions that were based on criteria for gamblingaddiction, but adapted to internet addiction.
    She came to the conclusion that internet addiction has to be a "real" addiction, since there are people whose personal lives suffer because of the amounts of time they spend online.

    57. Internet Addiction
    have become an everincreasing part of many people’s day-to-day life and therehave been reports in the press in recent years about ‘internet addiction’.
    http://www.addictions.co.uk/addiction.asp?ID=internet

    58. Ivan Goldberg Discusses Internet Addiction
    To demonstrate thc handbook's complexity and rigidity, he conjured up somethingcalled internet addiction disorder (IAD), the symptoms of which included
    http://www.psycom.net/iasg.html

    59. INTERNET ADDICTION
    PrevNextIndexThread internet addiction. Date Sun, 9 Jul 1995 Subjectinternet addiction. As the incidence and prevalence
    http://www.cybernothing.org/jdfalk/media-coverage/archive/msg01305.html
    [Prev] [Next] [Index] [Thread]
    INTERNET ADDICTION
    http://avocado.pc.helsinki.fi/~janne/ikg/

    60. BBC News | Health | Internet Addicts 'need Help'
    internet addiction is a growing problem and doctors should be better equippedto deal with it, research from the Center for Online Addiction suggests.
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/health/newsid_460000/460208.stm

    Front Page

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    Wednesday, September 29, 1999 Published at 02:01 GMT 03:01 UK
    Health
    Internet addicts 'need help'

    Surf's up - but do you spend too long online?
    Internet addiction is a growing problem and doctors should be better equipped to deal with it, research from the Center for Online Addiction suggests. It claims that people are spending an increasing amount of time online and then lie about it to hide their activities. In a paper to be published in the student edition of the British Medical Journal, Dr Kimberly Young, director of the centre, sets out a series of questions she says determine whether or not someone is an Internet addict. However, other psychologists working in the same field say that her criteria are too wide ranging to provide a useful definition. Self-test reveals all Dr Young said that an Internet addict would answer yes to at least five of the following questions:
    • Do you feel preoccupied with the Internet (you think about your previous online activity or anticipate your next session)?
    • Do you feel the need to use the Internet with increasing amounts of time in order to achieve satisfaction?

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