Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia

This study investigated the smartphone usage and dependency problem based on demographics among the adult population of Australia. A novel aspect of this study is that it specifically examines how people rate their perceived dependency levels compared with their perceived usage, which participants a...

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Main Authors: Tanya Linden, Saqib Nawaz, Matthew Mitchell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Computers in Human Behavior Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958821000087
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author Tanya Linden
Saqib Nawaz
Matthew Mitchell
author_facet Tanya Linden
Saqib Nawaz
Matthew Mitchell
author_sort Tanya Linden
collection DOAJ
description This study investigated the smartphone usage and dependency problem based on demographics among the adult population of Australia. A novel aspect of this study is that it specifically examines how people rate their perceived dependency levels compared with their perceived usage, which participants are asked to measure in comparison to their peers. Other novel aspects of this study include assessing the impact of parental status and occupational status on smartphone use and dependency, as well as addressing previous research gap in studying balanced population across genders and wide age range. This study also identifies activities associated with low usage and low dependency as opposed to activities linked to high smartphone usage and dependency. By comparing our findings to those obtained from similar studies in other countries and cultures, this study finds where problems are being detected consistently across multiple studies and where there are ambiguities. Where inconsistencies were identified, the question arises whether this is due to differences between measured populations (i.e. the Australian context of our research) or smartphones becoming more powerful and more affordable between research studies. Finally, this study explores possible avenues for future research into the usage patterns and smartphone dependency to support achieving balanced lifestyles of concerned individuals.
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spelling doaj.art-1a146e0e278c4602a805ed4326a6e2e42022-12-21T22:43:32ZengElsevierComputers in Human Behavior Reports2451-95882021-01-013100060Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in AustraliaTanya Linden0Saqib Nawaz1Matthew Mitchell2Department of Business Technology and Entrepreneurship, Swinburne Business School, Swinburne University of Technology, AustraliaDepartment of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Technology, Swinburne University of Technology, Australia; Corresponding author. Swinburn University of Technology, PO Box 218 - H23 John Street, Hawthorn, VIC, 3122, Australia.Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering, Faculty of Science, Engineering and Technology, Swinburne University of Technology, AustraliaThis study investigated the smartphone usage and dependency problem based on demographics among the adult population of Australia. A novel aspect of this study is that it specifically examines how people rate their perceived dependency levels compared with their perceived usage, which participants are asked to measure in comparison to their peers. Other novel aspects of this study include assessing the impact of parental status and occupational status on smartphone use and dependency, as well as addressing previous research gap in studying balanced population across genders and wide age range. This study also identifies activities associated with low usage and low dependency as opposed to activities linked to high smartphone usage and dependency. By comparing our findings to those obtained from similar studies in other countries and cultures, this study finds where problems are being detected consistently across multiple studies and where there are ambiguities. Where inconsistencies were identified, the question arises whether this is due to differences between measured populations (i.e. the Australian context of our research) or smartphones becoming more powerful and more affordable between research studies. Finally, this study explores possible avenues for future research into the usage patterns and smartphone dependency to support achieving balanced lifestyles of concerned individuals.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958821000087Smartphone usageSmartphone dependencySmartphone activities
spellingShingle Tanya Linden
Saqib Nawaz
Matthew Mitchell
Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
Computers in Human Behavior Reports
Smartphone usage
Smartphone dependency
Smartphone activities
title Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
title_full Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
title_fullStr Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
title_full_unstemmed Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
title_short Adults’ perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in Australia
title_sort adults perspectives on smartphone usage and dependency in australia
topic Smartphone usage
Smartphone dependency
Smartphone activities
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451958821000087
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