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
  • [31] Good News! Communication Findings May be Underestimated: Comparing Effect Sizes with Self-Reported and Logged Smartphone Use Data
    Jones-Jang, S. Mo
    Heo, Yu-Jin
    McKeever, Robert
    Kim, Jung-Hyun
    Moscowitz, Leigh
    Moscowitz, David
    JOURNAL OF COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION, 2020, 25 (05) : 346 - 363
  • [32] The unique vulnerabilities of nighttime smartphone use: a commentary on "tracked and self-reported nighttime smartphone use, general health, and healthcare utilization: results from the SmartSleep Study" by Drews et al.
    Kiss, Orsolya
    Baker, Fiona C.
    SLEEP, 2024, 47 (06)
  • [33] Self-Reported Knowledge, Correct Knowledge and use of UK Drinking Guidelines Among a Representative Sample of the English Population
    Buykx, Penny
    Li, Jessica
    Gavens, Lucy
    Hooper, Lucie
    de Matos, Elena Gomes
    Holmes, John
    ALCOHOL AND ALCOHOLISM, 2018, 53 (04): : 453 - 460
  • [34] More Attacks and Analgesic Use in Old Age: Self-Reported Headache Across the Lifespan in a German Sample
    Mueller, Britta
    Dresler, Thomas
    Gaul, Charly
    Glass, Anne
    Juergens, Tim
    Kropp, Peter
    Ruscheweyh, Ruth
    Straube, Andreas
    Foerderreuther, Stefanie
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [35] Do pop-up notifications regarding smartphone use decrease screen time, phone checking behavior, and self-reported problematic smartphone use? Evidence from a two-month experimental study
    Loid, Karina
    Taht, Karin
    Rozgonjuk, Dmitri
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2020, 102 (102) : 22 - 30
  • [36] (In)accuracy and convergent validity of daily end-of-day and single-time self-reported estimations of smartphone use among adolescents
    Tkaczyk, Michal
    Tancos, Martin
    Smahel, David
    Elavsky, Steriani
    Plhak, Jaromir
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2024, 158
  • [37] Objectively-measured and self-reported smartphone use in relation to surface learning, procrastination, academic productivity, and psychopathology symptoms in college students
    Elhai, Jon D.
    Sapci, Onur
    Yang, Haibo
    Amialchuk, Aliaksandr
    Rozgonjuk, Dmitri
    Montag, Christian
    HUMAN BEHAVIOR AND EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES, 2021, 3 (05) : 912 - 921
  • [38] Objectively-measured and self-reported smartphone use in relation to surface learning, procrastination, academic productivity, and psychopathology symptoms in college students
    Elhai, Jon
    Sapci, Onur
    Yang, Haibo
    Amialchuk, Aliaksandr
    Rozgonjuk, Dmitri
    Montag, Christian
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL ADDICTIONS, 2022, 11 : 20 - 20
  • [39] Self-Reported Screen Time on Social Networking Sites Associated With Problematic Smartphone Use in Chinese Adults: A Population-Based Study
    Guo, Ningyuan
    Luk, Tzu Tsun
    Wang, Man Ping
    Ho, Sai Yin
    Fong, Daniel Yee Tak
    Wan, Alice
    Chan, Sophia Siu-chee
    Lam, Tai Hing
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 11
  • [40] The use of low-calorie sweeteners is associated with self-reported prior intent to lose weight in a representative sample of US adults
    Drewnowski, A.
    Rehm, C. D.
    NUTRITION & DIABETES, 2016, 6 : e202 - e202