How physical activity protects against smartphone addiction: examining the mediating pathways of resilience and subjective wellbeing in Chinese university students
Huiyu Shi, Yuan Zhang, Zhihui Li, Jian Yang

TL;DR
This study explores how physical activity reduces smartphone addiction among Chinese university students by improving resilience and wellbeing.
Contribution
It identifies subjective wellbeing and the combined pathway of resilience and wellbeing as mediators between physical activity and reduced phone addiction.
Findings
Physical activity is linked to lower phone addiction through subjective wellbeing.
The chain pathway of resilience and subjective wellbeing also mediates this relationship.
Findings suggest physical activity could help prevent phone addiction in Chinese university students.
Abstract
Phone addiction has become a global concern, and empirical evidence indicates that physical activity is negatively associated with phone addiction. However, the mediating roles of resilience and subjective wellbeing in this relationshihp have scarcely been studied, especially in Chinese university students. The present study aimed to explore the direct and indirect associations between physical activity and phone addiction through the mediating roles of resilience and subjective wellbeing in Chinese university students. This cross-sectional study recruited 515 Chinese university students. Physical activity, resilience, subjective wellbeing, and phone addiction were assessed using validated self-report questionnaires. Pearson’s correlations were conducted to examine associations among variables, and mediation analyses were performed using bias-corrected bootstrap procedures in AMOS 26.0…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Technology on Adolescents · Eating Disorders and Behaviors · COVID-19 and Mental Health
