Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Smartphone use can ruin your leisure

Darpan News Desk, 05 Dec, 2014 01:33 PM
    Instead of entertainment, too much smartphone use can actually lead to leisure distress, feeling uptight, stressed and anxious during free time, new research has found.
     
    An increased level of smartphone use is linked with a diminished experience of daily leisure, the findings showed.
     
    "Being constantly connected to your phone is not likely to enhance your experience of leisure," said Jian Li from Kent State University in Ohio, the US.
     
    "On the other hand, disconnecting for short period of time in order to seek more challenging leisure opportunities is likely to be beneficial," Li added.
     
    The researchers from the Kent State University surveyed a random sample of 454 college students to examine how different types of cell phone users experience daily leisure.
     
    An analysis revealed three distinct types of cell phone users: low-use extroverts, low-use introverts and a high-use group.
     
    The high-use group averaged over 10 hours of cell phone use per day.
     
    "The high-frequency cell phone user may not have the leisure skills necessary to creatively fill their free time with intrinsically rewarding activities," researcher Andrew Lepp explained.
     
    "For such people, the ever-present smartphone may provide an easy, but less satisfying and more stressful, means of filling their time," Lepp added.
     
    In comparison to the other two groups, the high-frequency cell phone users experienced significantly more leisure distress, the researchers noted.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Computers in Human Behaviour.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers
    If you are a job seeker and a LinkedIn user, this app may just be for you.

    LinkedIn unveils new app for job seekers

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds
    A new mobile app can measure respiratory rate in children roughly six times faster than the standard stop watch method.

    App to measure breathing rate inside 10 seconds

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!
    Do you want to change your nail paint everyday but don't have enough time or patience? Worry not, a new app can take care of that.

    App can change your nail colour in seconds!

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision
    Google glass may allow you to click pictures and do video recording on the go, but Oxford University researchers are now developing a "smart" glass that enables people with poor vision to spot obstacles and "see" movement and facial expressions.

    'Smart' glasses to help people with poor vision

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?
    While advertising for conventional cigarettes has long been prohibited in the US, e-cigarettes are being routinely advertised in traditional and social media including twitter, claims a new study.

    Twitter new market for e-cigarettes?

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos
    Social networking site Facebook has launched a new app called Slingshot that allows people to share short-lived photos and videos with one another.

    Facebook launches app to share short-lived photos, videos