日韩午夜精品视频,欧美私密网站,国产一区二区三区四区,国产主播一区二区三区四区

Home
Letters to Editor
Domestic
World
Business & Trade
Culture & Science
Travel
Society
Government
Opinions
Policy Making in Depth
People
Investment
Life
Books/Reviews
News of This Week
Learning Chinese
Internet Abuse Raises Concern

Do you check your email 10 times a day and choose to communicate with people online rather than talk face-to-face?

Do you develop cravings and withdrawal symptoms when away from the computer?

Do you neglect important family activities, work responsibilities, academic projects or health concerns to spend hours on the Internet?

If you answered "Yes" to these questions, you might have developed a new illness, one that psychological specialists call Internet addiction disorder (IAD).

IAD is defined as a psychophysiological disorder involving tolerance, which means increased amounts of Internet surfing become necessary to evoke the same amount of pleasure. And withdrawal symptoms occur, especially anxiety, tremors and moodiness, or affective disturbances and interruptions of social relationships.

Mental health experts point out that IAD symptoms are becoming more common as online usage increases by the day.

About 6.4 percent of college students are suffering or heading towards IAD, according to a survey conducted by Professor Qian Mingyi with Peking University, with a group of 500 students from 12 universities in Beijing.

It is generally accepted that the World Wide Web is informative, convenient, resourceful and fun. But for some people, these benefits are becoming detriments, and the computer world rivals their real world.

Internet abuse has been cited as a contributing factor in the disintegration of marriages and the collapse of promising careers.

There are varying opinions on the subject, especially among Internet users themselves. Some say the Internet can be addicting, to the point that it disturbs one's life and the lives of those around him. Others say there is no such thing as IAD - getting pleasure out of a computer is not the same as getting pleasure from cocaine or any other drug.

IAD is not a recognized medical addiction like alcoholism, but "more like an out-of-control behaviour that threatens to overwhelm the addict's normal life," said Professor Lin Xuanhui with Fuzhou University.

"Some people are addicted to online game playing, some enmesh in chat rooms, others may engross in downloading pictures, songs and other information," said Lin. "It is a coming-home feeling that can entice people to the detriment of family, home, career and health."

Those who surf the Internet for a very long time every day are not necessarily subject to IAD. "A hobby is not an addiction," Lin said. "Whether there is overwhelming involvement in the computer and ignoring of the real world is the point."

Anyone with access to the Internet may become addicted, Lin warned. Home-based computer users are at the most risk.

However, the Internet is not the enemy just because people become dependent on it. It has many important benefits and in many ways, it makes our lives much simpler.

Yet in many other ways, it makes our lives more complex. As with alcohol or drugs, the Internet provides an escape from reality and everyday problems.

Some argue the interaction with other people on the Internet fills a social void and allows people to assume new identities. Others who interact with the false identity may assume these online relationships are the same as the real thing.

When does Internet use become a problem? Clearly, a problem exists when people become so engrossed and enmeshed in online activities that they neglect their "other" life in terms of health, relationships, jobs, and other responsibilities.

As with many of life's pleasures, moderation is the key.

(China Daily January 18, 2002)

Internet Surfers in China Hit 33.7 Million
Internet Poses New Challenges for Chinese Parents
Internet Media to See Fast Growth
Teenagers Glued to Web in Increasing Numbers
30 Million Homes Have Internet Access
Internet Cafe Debate Hots up
Half Beijing's Teenage Surfers Addicted to Recreational Websites
Copyright ? China Internet Information Center. All Rights Reserved
E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-68996214/15/16
主站蜘蛛池模板: 浮山县| 遵化市| 万安县| 岑巩县| 连云港市| 西藏| 金门县| 华宁县| 宝坻区| 青川县| 临夏市| 湛江市| 当阳市| 淄博市| 南开区| 都江堰市| 合作市| 盈江县| 福清市| 怀集县| 大厂| 长治县| 金乡县| 黑山县| 陆河县| 杭州市| 砀山县| 浑源县| 西乌珠穆沁旗| 江孜县| 丽江市| 陕西省| 施秉县| 永州市| 义乌市| 云浮市| 体育| 宜兴市| 蒲城县| 葵青区| 丹东市|