Fear of Missing Out, Reflective Smartphone Disengagement, and Loneliness in Late Adolescents.

fear of missing out loneliness mindfulness reflective smartphone disengagement smartphone

Journal

Cyberpsychology, behavior and social networking
ISSN: 2152-2723
Titre abrégé: Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101528721

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Oct 2023
Historique:
pubmed: 15 8 2023
medline: 15 8 2023
entrez: 15 8 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Reflective smartphone disengagement (i.e., deliberate actions to self-regulate when and how one should use one's smartphone) has become a necessary skill in our ever-connected lives, contributing to a healthy balance of related benefits and harms. However, disengaging from one's smartphone might compete with impulsive psychosocial motivators such as fear of missing out (FoMO) on others' rewarding experiences or feelings of loneliness. To shed light into these competitive processes, the present paper disentangles the reciprocal, over-time relationships between reflective smartphone disengagement, FoMO, and loneliness using data from a two-wave panel study among emerging adults (16-21 years of age). Measurement-invariant structural equation modeling suggests that FoMO and reflective smartphone disengagement negatively predict each other over time, indicating a possible spiraling process. In addition, reflective smartphone disengagement was also negatively related to feelings of loneliness. Together, these findings underline (a) how young people's impulsive and reflective system compete with each other over control of their smartphone usage, where (b) psychosocial benefits of reflective smartphone disengagement were validated among emerging adults, potentially helping them to strengthen the benefits and limit the harms of permanent interactions with and through technology.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37582211
doi: 10.1089/cyber.2023.0014
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

731-738

Auteurs

Jörg Matthes (J)

Department of Communication, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Anja Stevic (A)

Department of Communication, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Kevin Koban (K)

Department of Communication, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Marina F Thomas (MF)

Department of Communication, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Michaela Forrai (M)

Department of Communication, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.

Kathrin Karsay (K)

School for Mass Communication Research, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.

Classifications MeSH