Is the Smartphone Friend and Foe? Benefits and Costs of Self-reported Smartphone Use for Important Life Domains in a Representative German Sample

被引:0
|
作者
Yannick Roos
Cornelia Wrzus
机构
[1] Ruprecht-Karl University Heidelberg,
[2] Psychological Aging Research,undefined
来源
Current Psychology | 2023年 / 42卷
关键词
Smartphone use; Sleep; Well-being; Social relationships; Working hours; SEM tree analysis;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Smartphones are ubiquitous today, yet opinions differ as to whether the benefits or downsides of smartphone use predominate. Using the age-representative ‘Innovation Sample’ of the German Socio-Economic Panel study (N = 5,131, age M = 52.26, 17–96 years), this study examined associations between self-reported smartphone use and three life domains: individual well-being (psychological well-being, sleep); interpersonal relationships (social isolation, network size); and work (working hours, job satisfaction). For younger adults, increased smartphone use was associated with higher psychological well-being and longer sleep. In middle and late adulthood, moderate smartphone use was associated with the highest psychological well-being, and increased smartphone use was associated with less sleep. The more adults used the communicative functions of their smartphone, the more close friends they reported – irrespective of age. Employed adults who used work-related functions of their smartphone reported working more overtime and in the evening. Exploratory structural equation model trees examined non-linear combinations of smartphone use and demographic characteristics as moderators of these associations, but observed only few replicable patterns. The generally small associations might indicate that differences in ‘normal ranges’ of smartphone use are less consequential for the broad population than often assumed. We discuss challenges and future approaches for research on consequences of smartphone use.
引用
收藏
页码:24717 / 24731
页数:14
相关论文
共 48 条
  • [21] Cannabis Use Characteristics Associated with Self-Reported Cognitive Function in a Nationally Representative US sample
    Rubin-Kahana, Dafna Sara
    Butler, Kevin
    Hassan, Ahmed Nabeel
    Sanches, Marcos
    Le Foll, Bernard
    SUBSTANCE USE & MISUSE, 2024, 59 (09) : 1303 - 1312
  • [22] Smartphone use by government dermatology practitioners in Kuwait: a self-reported questionnaire based cross-sectional study
    Ali Jasem Buabbas
    Prem Sharma
    Adel Al-Abdulrazaq
    Hashem Shehab
    BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 19
  • [23] Relationships Among Self-reported Smartphone Use And Components Of The 24-hour Activity Cycle In University Students
    Boudreaux, Benjamin D.
    Frederick, Ginny M.
    Evans, Ellen M.
    O'Connor, Patrick J.
    Schmidt, Michael D.
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2021, 53 (08): : 210 - 210
  • [24] Smartphone use by government dermatology practitioners in Kuwait: a self-reported questionnaire based cross-sectional study
    Buabbas, Ali Jasem
    Sharma, Prem
    Al-Abdulrazaq, Adel
    Shehab, Hashem
    BMC MEDICAL INFORMATICS AND DECISION MAKING, 2019, 19 (01)
  • [25] Tracked and self-reported nighttime smartphone use, general health, and healthcare utilization: results from the SmartSleep Study
    Drews, Henning Johannes
    Sejling, Christoffer
    Andersen, Thea Otte
    Varga, Tibor V.
    Jensen, Andreas Kryger
    Rod, Naja Hulvej
    SLEEP, 2024, 47 (06)
  • [26] Self-reported addiction to pornography in a nationally representative sample: The roles of use habits, religiousness, and moral incongruence
    Grubbs, Joshua B.
    Kraus, Shane W.
    Perry, Samuel L.
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS, 2019, 8 (01) : 88 - 93
  • [27] Does mindfulness reduce the effects of risk factors for problematic smartphone use? Comparing frequency of use versus self-reported addiction
    Regan, Timothy
    Harris, Bethany
    Van Loon, Matthew
    Nanavaty, Namrata
    Schueler, Jordan
    Engler, Solangia
    Fields, Sherecce A.
    ADDICTIVE BEHAVIORS, 2020, 108
  • [28] How objectively measured Twitter and Instagram use relate to self-reported personality and tendencies toward Internet/Smartphone Use Disorder
    Peterka-Bonetta, Jessica
    Sindermann, Cornelia
    Elhai, Jon D.
    Montag, Christian
    HUMAN BEHAVIOR AND EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES, 2021, 3 (05) : 898 - 911
  • [29] EXPECTED COSTS AND BENEFITS MEDIATES THE RELATION BETWEEN PEER USE AND SELF-REPORTED USE OF ELECTRONIC CIGARETTES IN ADOLESCENTS
    Durkin, K.
    Williford, D.
    Enlow, P.
    Turiano, N.
    Murray, P.
    Banvard-Fox, C.
    Duncan, C.
    RESPIROLOGY, 2018, 23 : 172 - 172
  • [30] Exploring the Associations Between Self-reported Tendencies Toward Smartphone Use Disorder and Objective Recordings of Smartphone, Instant Messaging, and Social Networking App Usage: Correlational Study
    Marengo, Davide
    Sariyska, Rayna
    Schmitt, Helena Sophia
    Messner, Eva-Maria
    Baumeister, Harald
    Brand, Matthias
    Kannen, Christopher
    Montag, Christian
    JOURNAL OF MEDICAL INTERNET RESEARCH, 2021, 23 (09)