Profile
International Journal of Psychology & Behavior Analysis Volume 1 (2015), Article ID 1:IJPBA-109, 4 pages
http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-3867/2015/109
Research Article
Smartphone Addiction and Dissociative Experience: An investigation in Italian adolescents aged between 14 and 19 years

Concetta De Pasquale1*, Federica Sciacca2 and Zira Hichy1

1Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences and Advanced Techonologies "GF Ingrassia", Catania, Italy
2Department of Education Science, University of Catania, Via Teatro Greco, 84, Catania, Italy
Dr. Concetta De Pasquale, Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences and Advanced Techonologies "GF Ingrassia", Catania, Italy; E-mail: depasqua@unict.it
05 November 2015; 19 December 2015; 21 December 2015
De Pasquale C, Sciacca F,Hichy Z (2015) Smartphone Addiction and Dissociative Experience: An investigation in Italian adolescents aged between 14 and 19 years. Int J Psychol Behav Anal 1: 109. doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15344/2455-3867/2015/109

Abstract

Introduction: The aim of this investigation was the exploration of Smartphone addiction and dissociative experience and their consequences in adolescents.
Materials and Methods: The sample consisted of 200 adolescents, aged between 14 and 19 years recruited from two Public High Schools in Catania (Sicily, Italy). The materials were constituted by background questions, the Dissociative experience scale, the Smartphone addiction scale and the Ten Item Personality Inventory.
Results: Results showed that boys only suffer of Smartphone addiction. About personality factors, the higher was this Smartphone addiction, the higher was the level of agreeableness and lower the emotional stability. Also, according to DSM-5, there was also no presence of dissociative disorders, but there was only a little correlation with “absorption and imaginative assimilation” dimension.
Conclusion: Despite the massive use of smartphones in teenage boys, there was no presence of pathological disorders such as the so called “dissociative trance” [16]. There was just a slight correlation with the "absorption and imaginative assimilation" dimension, which is the tendency to engage our mind in situations of altered or highly focused attention. This phenomenon is relatively and frequently normal amongst the non-clinic population but it needs attention in order to prevent and avoid real psychopathological disorders.