Bodford Jessica E, Kwan Virginia S Y, Sobota David S
Department of Psychology, Arizona State University , Tempe, Arizona.
Cyberpsychol Behav Soc Netw. 2017 May;20(5):320-326. doi: 10.1089/cyber.2016.0500.
As technology's presence grows increasingly concrete in global societies, so too do our relationships with the devices we keep close at hand from day to day. Whereas research has, in the past, framed smartphone addiction in terms of possessional attachment, the present research hypothesizes that anxious smartphone attachment stems from human attachment, in which Anxiously attached individuals may be more likely to generalize their anxious attachment style to communication devices. In the present study, we found support for this hypothesis and showed that anxious smartphone attachment predicts (1) anthropomorphic beliefs, (2) reliance on-or "clinginess" toward-smartphones, and (3) a seemingly compulsive urge to answer one's phone, even in dangerous situations (e.g., while driving). Taken together, we seek to provide a theoretical framework and methodological tools to identify the sources of technology attachment and those most at risk of engaging in dangerous or inappropriate behaviors as a result of attachment to ever-present mobile devices.
随着技术在全球社会中的存在日益具体,我们与日常随身携带的设备之间的关系也是如此。过去的研究将智能手机成瘾界定为占有性依恋,而本研究假设,焦虑型智能手机依恋源于人类依恋,即焦虑依恋型个体可能更倾向于将其焦虑依恋风格推广到通信设备上。在本研究中,我们为这一假设找到了支持,并表明焦虑型智能手机依恋能够预测:(1)拟人化信念;(2)对智能手机的依赖或“黏附”;以及(3)即使在危险情况下(如开车时)也似乎有一种接电话的强迫冲动。综上所述,我们试图提供一个理论框架和方法工具,以识别技术依恋的来源,以及那些因依恋无处不在的移动设备而最有可能从事危险或不当行为的人。