August 18, 2021
When you are out with friends, do they pay more attention to your conversation or to the incoming texts on their phones? Instead of looking you in the eye, are they furtively glancing down at the screen?
While it may be commonplace, snubbing one’s friends can have serious repercussions on relationships, and there are a variety of factors that may drive individuals to ignore their friends in favor of an electronic screen, according to findings of a new University of Georgia study.
Indeed, depressed people are likely to phub their friends more frequently; as are socially anxious people, who might prefer online social interactions to face-to-face communication. Personality traits such as neuroticism also influence phubbing behavior.
“And of course, some people who have high social anxiety or depression are more likely to be addicted to their smartphone,” said Juhyung Sun, lead author on the paper who completed her master’s degree in communication studies at UGA.
The very ordinariness of phubbing suggests some fundamental insights about how technology interrupts social interactions—and how such actions are accepted, if not embraced.
“I observed that so many people use their phones while they are sitting with their friends at the cafe, any dining time, regardless of the relationship type,” said Sun, currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Oklahoma.
She first considered some negative reasons behind phubbing—including smart phone addiction and, relatedly, the habit of constantly reading notifications that pop up onscreen.
“They have a high tendency to maintain social harmony while avoiding arguments that can ruin their relationships.,” she said. “In face-to-face conversations, people with high levels of agreeableness consider phubbing behavior rude and impolite to their conversational partners.”
That dynamic may influence the prevalence of phubbing in the context of a work environment
“It’s ironic that while so many people believe that phubbing behavior is rude, they still do it,” Sun said. “A majority of people phub others; and in a group, it may seem OK, because it’s just me, the speaker doesn’t notice I’m using the phone. The number of a people in a group can be one reason.”
Alternately, disabling or turning over a phone can indicate a show of respect for a situation and focus on a person.
“That, too, is a signal: I am listening to what you are saying, this meeting is important and I am focusing on you,” Sun said.
Jennifer Samp, professor in the UGA Franklin College of Arts and Sciences department Communication Studies and Sun’s advisor on the project, believes that the act of Fphubbing may have even greater implications once the larger public returns to face-to-face interactions after the pandemic subsides.
“People relied heavily on phones and other technologies to stay connected during the pandemic,” Samp said. “For many, staying connected in a more distanced manner via texts and video messaging was more comfortable than face-to-face interaction. Will people — particularly anxious ones — still phubb when physically reunited? Time will tell.”
The study has been published in the journal, Behaviour & Information Technology.
Research contact: @ScienceDaily