EVOLUTION AND FRONTIERS OF CYBERCHONDRIA RESEARCH: A BIBLIOMETRIC REVIEW BASED ON CITESPACE

Authors

  • QI WANG Faculty of Modern Languages and Communication, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Selangor, Malaysia.
  • WAN ANITA WAN ABAS Faculty of Modern Languages and Communication, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Selangor, Malaysia.
  • ZULHAMRI ABDULLAH Faculty of Modern Languages and Communication, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Selangor, Malaysia.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55197/qjssh.v7i2.1178

Keywords:

cyberchondria, bibliometric analysis, CiteSpace, behavioral addiction

Abstract

This study employs CiteSpace to map the evolutionary trajectory and intellectual structure of cyberchondria research from 2016 to 2026. A bibliometric analysis was conducted on 348 core documents retrieved from the Web of Science Core Collection, focusing on publication trends, collaboration networks, and citation bursts. Findings delineate a three-stage evolution: early conceptualization within clinical psychology, a COVID-19-driven surge, and current reconceptualization as a digital behavioral addiction. A critical "eHealth Literacy Paradox" is identified, wherein higher digital literacy may paradoxically exacerbate anxiety due to interactions with commercial recommendation algorithms. Structurally, the field remains highly fragmented, separating early clinical psychiatry cohorts from recent information systems and algorithmic research clusters. The results suggest that cyberchondria is a product of both individual cognitive bias and platform algorithmic alienation. To address current structural fragmentation, future research must dismantle disciplinary barriers and foster interdisciplinary collaboration between psychiatrists and algorithm engineers. Transitioning from individual-centric interventions to the ethical optimization of digital health architectures is essential for constructing a resilient and inclusive health information ecosystem.

References

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Published

2026-04-30

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Articles

How to Cite

EVOLUTION AND FRONTIERS OF CYBERCHONDRIA RESEARCH: A BIBLIOMETRIC REVIEW BASED ON CITESPACE. (2026). Quantum Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 7(2), 469-483. https://doi.org/10.55197/qjssh.v7i2.1178