Advances in Internet Psychology

Cyberpsychology (also known as Internet psychology, web psychology, or digital psychology) is a developing field that encompasses all psychological phenomena associated with or affected by emerging technology. Cyber comes from the word cyberspace, the study of the operation of control and communication; psychology is the study of the mind and behavior.

In the present book, fifteen typical literatures about Advances in Internet Psychology published on international authoritative journals were selected to introduce the worldwide newest progress, which contains reviews or original researches on Internet Psychology, social media effect and online identity, etc. We hope this book can demonstrate Internet Psychology as well as give references to the researchers, students and other related people.
Components of the Book:
  • Chapter 1
    Public educational psychology services in Israel on the internet
  • Chapter 2
    The Psychology of Internet Fraud Victimisation: a Systematic Review
  • Chapter 3
    Sort of a nice distance: a qualitative study of the experiences of therapists working with internet-based treatment of problematic substance use
  • Chapter 4
    Scientometric trend analyses of publications on the history of psychology: Is psychology becoming an unhistorical science?
  • Chapter 5
    The Psychology of Mukbang Watching: A Scoping Review of the Academic and Non-academic Literature
  • Chapter 6
    Assessing the efficacy of a culturally adapted cognitive behavioural internet-delivered treatment for depression: protocol for a randomised controlled trial
  • Chapter 7
    Internet-based treatment for Romanian adults with panic disorder: protocol of a randomized controlled trial comparing a Skype-guided with an unguided self-help intervention (the PAXPD study)
  • Chapter 8
    Detecting misinformation in online social networks using cognitive psychology
  • Chapter 9
    An internet-based intervention for adjustment disorder (TAO): study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
  • Chapter 10
    Personality traits and Internet usage across generation cohorts: Insights from a nationally representative study
  • Chapter 11
    Internet-delivered cognitive behaviour therapy for chronic health conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis
  • Chapter 12
    Reflections on a Health Psychology Service for Patients with Uveal Melanoma: The Challenge of Psychological Screening and Intervention When Distress is ‘Normal’
  • Chapter 13
    Towards sustainable mental health promotion: trial-based health-economic evaluation of a positive psychology intervention versus usual care
  • Chapter 14
    Item Response Theory Analysis of the Recoded Internet Gaming Disorder Scale-Short-Form (IGDS9-SF)
  • Chapter 15
    Efficacy of an internet-based exposure treatment for flying phobia (NO-FEAR Airlines) with and without therapist guidance: a randomized controlled trial
Readership: Students, academics, teachers and other people attending or interested in Internet Psychology.
Halley M. Pontes, Department of Psychology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK

Peter Salmon, Institute of Psychology, Health & Society, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK

Kagan Kircaburun, International Gaming Research Unit, Psychology Department, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, UK

Swati Mehta, Department of Psychology, University of Regina, Regina, Canada

Janice Ablett, Liverpool Ocular Oncology Centre & Clinical Health Psychology Service-Cancer, Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospital, Liverpool, UK

Charlotte Beard, Palo Alto University, Palo Alto, USA

and more...
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