Should It Stay or Should It Go Now? Smartphones and Relational Health

Q1 Social Sciences
Matthew A. Lapierre, Meleah N. Lewis
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引用次数: 36

Abstract

Since introduced in the mid-2000s, smartphones have become widely used, particularly among young adults. With the ability to connect to others across numerous modalities and occupy one’s time, these devices have become personal extensions for many people. However, recent research suggests that young people are particularly likely to find these devices indispensable, even to the point of feeling that they cannot live without them. The current study tests whether smartphone use and smartphone dependency affects the health of romantic relationships among college-aged adults. Participants were asked to report on their own smartphone use and dependency as well as the perceived use and dependency of their partner. Results reveal that participants’ smartphone dependency is significantly linked to relationship uncertainty, while partners’ perceived smartphone dependency predicts less relationship satisfaction. Moreover, results suggest that smartphone use, in general, does not affect relational health. Thus, it appears that it is the psychological reliance on these devices, and one’s need to constantly be connected with his or her smartphone, that potentially affects relationships and not actual use.
它应该留下还是现在就走?智能手机与关系健康
自2000年代中期推出以来,智能手机已被广泛使用,尤其是在年轻人中。由于这些设备能够通过多种方式与他人联系,并占据一个人的时间,这些设备已经成为许多人的个人延伸。然而,最近的研究表明,年轻人特别容易发现这些设备是不可或缺的,甚至到了感觉离开它们就不能生活的地步。目前的研究测试了智能手机的使用和对智能手机的依赖是否会影响大学生恋爱关系的健康。参与者被要求报告自己对智能手机的使用和依赖,以及他们认为伴侣对智能手机的使用和依赖。结果显示,参与者对智能手机的依赖与关系的不确定性显著相关,而伴侣感知到的智能手机依赖预示着较低的关系满意度。此外,研究结果表明,智能手机的使用通常不会影响人际关系健康。因此,似乎是对这些设备的心理依赖,以及一个人不断与智能手机联系的需求,潜在地影响了人际关系,而不是实际使用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Psychology of Popular Media Culture ® is a scholarly journal dedicated to publishing empirical research and papers on how popular culture and general media influence individual, group, and system behavior. The journal publishes rigorous research studies, as well as data-driven theoretical papers on constructs, consequences, program evaluations, and trends related to popular culture and various media sources. Although the journal welcomes and encourages submissions from a wide variety of disciplines, topics should be linked to psychological theory and research.
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