Guangming Li
South China Normal University
17 Papers
1 Citations
Guangming Li is an academic researcher from South China Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Computer science. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Relationship between anxiety, depression, sex, obesity, and internet addiction in Chinese adolescents: A short-term longitudinal study.
TL;DR: There was a linear decline in adolescent Internet addiction over the six months and the results spoke to the importance of considering mental health problems and sex in any intervention efforts to reduce adolescent Internet Addiction.
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A Generalizability Analysis of the Mobile Phone Addiction Tendency Scale for Chinese College Students.
TL;DR: Investigation of the psychometric properties and the internal structure of the Mobile Phone Addiction Tendency Scale (MPATS), the most widely used survey questionnaire assessing the status of Chinese college students’ mobile addiction, showed that the variance component of the participants and the variation related to the participants explained most of the variation of the scale, while the variance components of the items was small.
A Multivariate Generalizability Theory Approach to College Students' Evaluation of Teaching.
TL;DR: Teachers' teaching level evaluation is an important component in classroom teaching and professional promotion in the institutions of higher learning in China and it was revealed that the evaluation dependability of science curriculum appeared higher than that of liberal arts curriculum.
Hierarchical Linear Model of Internet Addiction and Associated Risk Factors in Chinese Adolescents: A Longitudinal Study
TL;DR: In this paper , a hierarchical linear model was used to explore the relationship between adolescents' internet addiction and associated risk factors (depression, anxiety, gender, and obesity) from the perspective of longitudinal analysis.
Influence of Intellectual-cultural Orientation as Family Culture on Chinese College Students’ Subjective Well-being: A Moderation Model
Guangming Li,Yuelin Wu,Haiying Wen,Fadi Zhang,De-liang Yan +4 more
- 01 Jan 2022
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored whether the family culture, as supplement of social culture, has significant impacts on subjective well-being and found that the trait of family culture should be considered as a supplement of the social culture and a critical complementary moderating influenced factor for subjective wellbeing.
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