Mindfulness, Self-Control, and Short Video Addiction in 892 Medical Students
by Yuting Luo·Updated 1mo ago
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Description
892 medical students participated in a survey linking mindfulness, self-control, and short video addiction. The study, authored by Yuting Luo and uploaded in May 2026, found self-control mediates 83.33% of the effect of mindfulness on addiction and categorized students into low (17.60%), medium (57.06%), and high-risk (25.34%) addiction groups.
Use Cases
Predicting addiction risk profiles based on mindfulness and self-control scores mentioned in the description
Analyzing demographic factors like only-child status as correlates of addiction risk
Building mediation models to understand the psychological pathways between mindfulness and behavioral addiction
Strengths
Survey includes 892 participants, providing a substantial sample size for analysis.
Results include specific statistical findings, such as a 83.33% indirect mediation effect and precise risk group percentages.
Dataset is shared under a permissive CC-BY-4.0 license.
Limitations
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Data may reflect geographic or institutional bias inherent to the single study sample.
Provenance
Source
Yuting Luo via figshare
Collection Method
Survey using the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale, Self-Control Scale, and Short Video Addiction Scale.
Time Range
Survey date unknown; dataset uploaded May 2026.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-05-01 12:13:41; freshness should be verified.
Geography
Likely China (inferred from author name and context), but not explicitly stated.
Primary data file is a 23.3 KB DOCX document, which may require conversion for analysis.