Psychology in Education 2022
DOI: 10.33910/2686-9527-2022-4-2-145-153
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Socio-psychological factors in the psychological well-being of Chinese adolescents

Abstract: Introduction. The article presents an empirical study that compares the psychological well-being of academically gifted Chinese adolescents with the psychological well-being of their normal peers and examines the sociopsychological factors of psychological well-being of Chinese adolescents. The problematic of psychological well-being as an important resource for the optimal functioning of all the mental structures of the individual necessary for life has always attracted the attention of scholars. The empirica… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…The phenomenon that parents are distracted or ignore their children because of their smartphones when they are interacting with their children is defined as parental phubbing, which is a negative form of parent–child interaction and has attracted the interest of researchers (Wang, Gao, et al, 2020; Wang, Zhou, et al, 2022). As a new form of social exclusion (David & Roberts, 2017), parental phubbing negatively impacts adolescents’ psychological development, such as reducing the quality of parent–child communication, impairing adolescents’ interpersonal communication ability, and increasing the risk of accidental injury and problem behaviors (for a review, see Jiang et al, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The phenomenon that parents are distracted or ignore their children because of their smartphones when they are interacting with their children is defined as parental phubbing, which is a negative form of parent–child interaction and has attracted the interest of researchers (Wang, Gao, et al, 2020; Wang, Zhou, et al, 2022). As a new form of social exclusion (David & Roberts, 2017), parental phubbing negatively impacts adolescents’ psychological development, such as reducing the quality of parent–child communication, impairing adolescents’ interpersonal communication ability, and increasing the risk of accidental injury and problem behaviors (for a review, see Jiang et al, 2021).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%