Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Most US college students dependent on smartphones: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 14 Sep, 2014 07:53 AM
  • Most US college students dependent on smartphones: Study
Nearly 75 percent of the college students in the US are dependent on smartphones while one in five consider themselves to be "lost" without the device, says a study.
 
While 86 percent said they sleep with their phone within an arm's reach, 81 percent replied that they would panic if they lost their phone.
 
"Smartphones have helped nurture a culture of impatience in which one in four people abandon a web page that takes more than four seconds to load," wrote researchers from the Alabama State University in Montgomery, Alabama.
 
"That spills over into a modern world where instant access has become the norm and deep-thinking is getting short shrift," they added.
 
The study found that 63 percent college students think they hear their phone when it makes no sound while 55 percent use their phone to escape from problems or to get relief from a bad mood.
 
Some of the reasons to be dependent on smartphones are practical.
 
"For instance, women felt safer when they had their phones with them and said they were more likely to panic if they couldn't find it," researchers said.
 
According to them, in an age of constant online interaction, people rarely take time to deal with their own thoughts and have become increasingly lonely, feeding a sense of self-alienation.
 
The study titled "The Truth About Smartphone Addiction" is set to appear in the national College Student Journal.

MORE Tech ARTICLES

Major setback to Microsoft: No Windows 8 in China

Major setback to Microsoft:  No Windows 8 in China
In a major setback to Microsoft, China has banned purchase of Windows 8, the latest version of the US software giant's venerable desktop operating system, for government computers.

Major setback to Microsoft: No Windows 8 in China

Technology to lower risk of midair collisions

Technology to lower risk of midair collisions
Here is a new technology that has successfully lowered the risk of midair collisions in small aircraft.

Technology to lower risk of midair collisions

Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation
 An app that teaches women how to masturbate has been removed by Apple from its iTunes stores worldwide.

Apple rejects app to facilitate female masturbation

Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots
Roughly one in six respondents would “have sex with an android” and another one in three (29 percent) were 'OK' with others getting down with robots, the survey revealed.

Bizarre! One in six Britons prefer sex with robots

Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!
Have you received a less favourable appraisal from your boss this year? You are likely coming to office late. A study has found bosses to be favouring employees who, even though on flexible timings, arrived early.

Want to know how to get a good raise? Read this!

New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment

New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment
Researchers have developed a new technology that could bring photodynamic therapy (PDT), which uses lasers to activate special drugs to treat easily accessible tumours such as oral and skin cancer, into areas of the body which were previously inaccessible.

New technology may improve light-based cancer treatment