What the study found
AI tool usage experience was associated with higher academic stress among college students. Loneliness partly explained this relationship, and academic self-efficacy influenced the first part of the pathway.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors suggest that AI tool use may affect students not only directly but also indirectly through loneliness. They conclude that the psychological effects of AI use in educational settings are more complex than simple convenience or efficiency.
What the researchers tested
The researchers surveyed 624 university students. They used the AI Tool Usage Experience Scale, UCLA Loneliness Scale, Academic Stress Scale, and Academic Self-Efficacy Scale to examine the relationship between AI tool usage experience, loneliness, academic self-efficacy, and academic stress.
What worked and what didn't
AI tool usage experience significantly positively predicted academic stress. Loneliness partially mediated this relationship. Academic self-efficacy significantly moderated the first stage of the mediation pathway, with the positive link between AI usage and loneliness being stronger for students with higher academic self-efficacy and weaker for those with lower academic self-efficacy.
What to keep in mind
The abstract does not describe study limitations beyond the fact that it was a survey of university students. The summary is limited to the relationships reported in the abstract and does not establish causation.
Key points
- AI tool usage experience was significantly associated with higher academic stress.
- Loneliness partially mediated the relationship between AI tool use and academic stress.
- Academic self-efficacy moderated the link between AI usage and loneliness.
- The positive association between AI use and loneliness was stronger for students with higher academic self-efficacy.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- AI tool use linked to higher academic stress in college students
- Authors:
- Yan Wang, Sihua Xu
- Institutions:
- East China University of Political Science and Law
- Publication date:
- 2026-01-07
- OpenAlex record:
- View
- Image credit:
- Photo by Yan Krukau on Pexels · Pexels License
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