Objective: To date, childhood has hardly been considered in the development of effective prevention and intervention programs for gaming disorder and Internet addiction. PROTECTdissonance was therefore designed as a 1-hour dissonance-based, universal primary prevention program for grade 5 high-school students. This pilot study examines the immediate effects of dissonance induction on attitudes toward gaming. Method: A single-Arm A+B design with three measurement points (T0, T1, T2) assessed attitudes toward gaming using the Gaming Attitude Test (GAT). The baseline sequence (sequence A, T0 to T1, subsample) included N = 83 high-school students (age: M = 10.27; SD = 0.48) and the intervention sequence (sequence B, T1 to T2, total sample) included N = 200 pupils (age: M = 10.24; SD = 0.47). Acceptance and satisfaction were recorded after the intervention. Results: Hierarchical linear growth models showed a significant reduction of GAT symptoms through the intervention, both in the total GAT score and on the subscale "Trivialization of Negative Consequences."There were no changes in the natural course (baseline sequence A). Pupils correspondingly reported a high rate of satisfaction with PROTECTdissonance. Conclusions: A brief, targeted dissonance-induction exercise shows immediate effects on an attitudinal measure of gaming. To follow up on this promising approach, future studies should investigate whether reduced trivialization of negative consequences of gaming is actually reflected in behavioral change.
CITATION STYLE
Lindenberg, K., & Hofmann, S. (2022). Examining the effects of dissonance-based primary prevention of Internet and computer-game addiction on attitudes toward gaming among grade 5 pupils: A pilot study. Zeitschrift Fur Kinder- Und Jugendpsychiatrie Und Psychotherapie, 50(1), 25–36. https://doi.org/10.1024/1422-4917/a000814
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