Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2024 May 29;19(5):e0298422. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0298422. eCollection 2024.
Rates of adolescent mood disorders and adolescent smartphone use have risen in parallel, leading some to suggest that smartphone use might have detrimental effects on adolescents' moods. Alternatively, it is possible that adolescents turn to smartphone use when experiencing negative mood. The purpose of this study was to explore the relationship between adolescent smartphone use and mood using a longitudinal methodology that measured both in real-time.
This study used an Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) procedure completed by 253 12-17-year old participants from across the United States. Participants received short surveys delivered to their smartphones at random points throughout the day. Measures included real-time, in-situ assessments of smartphone use, current mood, and mood before smartphone use.
Based on tests of a multilevel regression model, adolescent moods were positively associated with smartphone use (β = 0.261, F(1,259.49) = 19.120, p < 0.001), and that mood was positively associated with the length of phone use sessions (length of phone use β = 0.100, F(1, 112.88) = 5.616, p = 0.020). Participants also reported significant changes in mood during phone use, such that moods before phone use were significantly lower than moods during phone use (MChange = 0.539, t(2491) = 23.174, p < 0.001). Change in mood (mood before minus mood during phone use) was positively associated with the length of smartphone use sessions (β = 0.097, F(1,122.20) = 4.178, p = 0.043), such that participants who had a higher change in mood were more likely to report a longer length of smartphone use.
Findings suggest that adolescent smartphone use is positively associated with mood. This finding may suggest that adolescents use smartphones for mood modification, which aligns with an understanding of smartphone use as potentially addictive behavior.
青少年情绪障碍和青少年智能手机使用的比率呈平行上升趋势,这使得一些人认为智能手机的使用可能对青少年的情绪产生不利影响。或者,青少年在情绪低落时可能会转向使用智能手机。本研究的目的是通过实时测量来探索青少年智能手机使用与情绪之间的关系。
本研究使用了一种生态瞬时评估(EMA)程序,该程序由来自美国各地的 253 名 12-17 岁的参与者完成。参与者会在一天中的随机时间收到发送到他们智能手机上的简短调查。测量包括对智能手机使用、当前情绪以及使用智能手机前的情绪进行实时、现场评估。
基于多层次回归模型的测试,青少年情绪与智能手机使用呈正相关(β=0.261,F(1,259.49)=19.120,p<0.001),并且情绪与手机使用时长呈正相关(手机使用时长β=0.100,F(1,112.88)=5.616,p=0.020)。参与者还报告了在手机使用过程中情绪的显著变化,例如使用手机前的情绪明显低于使用手机时的情绪(MChange=0.539,t(2491)=23.174,p<0.001)。情绪变化(使用手机前的情绪减去使用手机时的情绪)与智能手机使用时长呈正相关(β=0.097,F(1,122.20)=4.178,p=0.043),即情绪变化较大的参与者更有可能报告智能手机使用时长较长。
研究结果表明,青少年智能手机的使用与情绪呈正相关。这一发现可能表明,青少年使用智能手机是为了调节情绪,这与将智能手机的使用理解为潜在成瘾行为的观点一致。