Journal: Cyberpsy., Behavior, and Soc. Networking

Volume 19, Issue 10

577 -- 578Brenda K. Wiederhold. Lessons Learned as We Begin the Third Decade of Virtual Reality
579 -- 586Jaewook Shin, Mincheol Shin. To Be Connected or Not To Be Connected? Mobile Messenger Overload, Fatigue, and Mobile Shunning
587 -- 592Zhengbao Wen, Xiaowei Geng, Yinghua Ye. Does the Use of WeChat Lead to Subjective Well-Being?: The Effect of Use Intensity and Motivations
593 -- 600Jesse Fox, Megan A. Vendemia. Selective Self-Presentation and Social Comparison Through Photographs on Social Networking Sites
601 -- 608Jacquelynn R. Jones, Jason B. Colditz, Ariel Shensa, Jaime E. Sidani, Liu Yi Lin, Martha Ann Terry, Brian A. Primack. Associations Between Internet-Based Professional Social Networking and Emotional Distress
609 -- 614Michael Boulton, Louise Boulton, Eleonora Camerone, James Down, Joanna Hughes, Chloe Kirkbride, Rachel Kirkham, Peter Macaulay, Jessica Sanders. Enhancing Primary School Children's Knowledge of Online Safety and Risks with the CATZ Cooperative Cross-Age Teaching Intervention: Results from a Pilot Study
615 -- 620Yeon Kyoung Joo, Roselyn J. Lee-Won. An Agent-Based Intervention to Assist Drivers Under Stereotype Threat: Effects of In-Vehicle Agents' Attributional Error Feedback
621 -- 627Kaitlyn Burnell, Tara L. Kuther. Predictors of Mobile Phone and Social Networking Site Dependency in Adulthood
628 -- 634Harris Hyun-soo Kim, Sun Joo Grace Ahn. How Does Neighborhood Quality Moderate the Association Between Online Video Game Play and Depression? A Population-Level Analysis of Korean Students
635 -- 0Andrea Gaggioli. CyberSightings
636 -- 0Giuseppe Riva. CyberEurope