Development and Validation of the Mukbang Addiction Scale

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Date

2021

Authors

Kagan Kircaburun
Vasileios Stavropoulos
Andrew Harris
Filipa Calado
Emrah Emirtekin
Mark D. Griffiths

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Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SPRINGER

Open Access Color

HYBRID

Green Open Access

Yes

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Publicly Funded

No
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Abstract

Recent literature has speculated that some individuals spend lots of time watching mukbang (i.e. combination of the South Korean words 'eating' ['meokneun'] and 'broadcast' ['bangsong'] that refers to eating broadcasts where a person eats a large portion of food on camera whilst interacting with viewers) and compensate different needs using this activity. However compensating unattained offline needs using a specific online activity could lead to the addictive use of that activity. The present study investigated problematic mukbang watching by developing and validating the Mukbang Addiction Scale (MAS). An online survey was administered to 236 university students (M-age = 20.50 years, 62% female) who had watched mukbang at least once. Construct validity criterion validity and reliability analyses indicated that the MAS had good psychometric properties. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses confirmed the unidimensional structure of the scale. The Cronbach's alpha (alpha = .95) and composite reliability (CR = .92) suggested that the MAS had excellent internal consistency. Latent class analyses (LCA) revealed two primary profiles one with high endorsement and one with low endorsement of the items assessed. Item response theory (IRT) findings also indicated a good model fit. IRT findings provisionally supported a cut-off scale raw score of 22 (out of 30). Assessment and clinical-related implications of the findings are illustrated in accordance with other excessive behaviours.

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Keywords

Mukbang, Online eating, Problematic mukbang use, Mukbang addiction, Internet, Internet addiction, MODEL, CRITERION, Problematic Mukbang Use, Mukbang Addiction, Mukbang, Online Eating, Internet Addiction, Internet, mukbang, online eating, College of Health and Biomedicine, problematic mukbang use, 1117 Public Health and Health Services, internet addiction, 1701 Psychology, internet, mukbang addiction

Fields of Science

03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine, 0305 other medical science

Citation

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OpenCitations Citation Count
37

Source

International Journal of Mental Health and Addiction

Volume

19

Issue

4

Start Page

1031

End Page

1044
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Citations

CrossRef : 4

Scopus : 39

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Mendeley Readers : 107

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