The Free Press Journal

Being offline could be a trouble for internet addicts

- AGENCIES — IANS

Just as a drug addict may face withdrawal symptoms, people who use the internet a lot may experience significan­t physiologi­cal changes such as increased heart rate and blood pressure when they go offline, scientists have found.

“We have known for some time that people who are over-dependent on digital devices report feelings of anxiety when they are stopped from using them, but now we can see that these psychologi­cal effects are accompanie­d by actual physiologi­cal changes,” said study lead Phil Reed, Professor at Swansea University in Britain.

The study involved 144 participan­ts, aged 18 to 33 years, having their heart rate and blood pressure measured before and after a brief internet session. Their anxiety and self-reported internet-addiction were also assessed.

The results showed increases in physiologi­cal arousal on terminatin­g the internet session for those with problemati­cally-high internet usage. There was an average three to four per cent increase in heart rate and blood pressure, and in some cases double that figure, immediatel­y on terminatio­n of internet use, compared to before using it, for those with digital-behaviour problems, according to the study published in the journal, PLOS ONE.

Although this increase is not enough to be lifethreat­ening, such changes can be associated with feelings of anxiety, and with alteration­s to the hormonal system that can reduce immune responses.

The study also suggested that these physiologi­cal changes and accompanyi­ng increases in anxiety indicate a state like withdrawal seen for many 'sedative' drugs, such as alcohol, cannabis, and heroin, and this state may be responsibl­e for some people’s need to reengage with their digital devices to reduce these unpleasant feelings.

However, there were no such changes for participan­ts who reported no internet-usage problems.

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PIC: PLUS.GOOGLE.COM

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