When was the last time you opened your laptop midconversation or
brought your desktop computer to the dinner table? Ridiculous, right?
But if you are like a large number of Americans, you have done both with
your smartphone.
Less than a decade after the introduction of the first iPhone, more people reach for their smartphones first thing
in the morning than reach for coffee, a toothbrush or even the partner
lying next to them in bed. During the day, with a smartphone in our
pocket, we can check our email while spending time with our children
just as easily as we can text a friend while at work. And regardless of
what we are doing, many of us are bombarded by notifications of new messages, social media posts, breaking news, app updates and more.
Anecdotal evidence
suggests that this pervasiveness of smartphones is making us
increasingly distracted and hyperactive. These presumed symptoms of
constant digital stimulation also happen to characterize a well-known
neurodevelopmental disorder: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder,
or ADHD. Could the pinging and dinging of our smartphones be afflicting
even those of us not suffering from ADHD with some of that condition’s
symptoms? As a behavioral scientist, I set out to test this idea in a
well-controlled experiment.
Studying digital interruption
My colleagues and I recruited 221 millennials – students at the University of British Columbia – to participate in a two-week study.
Importantly, these participants were recruited from the university’s
general participant pool, rather than from a population of students
diagnosed with ADHD.
During the first week, we asked half the participants to minimize
phone interruptions by activating the “do-not-disturb” settings and
keeping their phones out of sight and far from reach. We instructed the
other half to keep their phone alerts on and their phones nearby
whenever possible.
In the second week, we reversed the instructions: Participants who
had used their phones’ “do-not-disturb” settings switched on phone
alerts, and vice versa. The order in which we gave the instructions to
each participant was randomly determined by a flip of a coin. This study
design ensured that everything was kept constant, except for how
frequently people were interrupted by their phones. We confirmed that
people felt more interrupted by their phones when they had their phone
alerts on, as opposed to having them off.
Measuring inattentiveness and hyperactivity
We measured inattentiveness and hyperactivity by asking participants
to identify how frequently they had experienced 18 symptoms of ADHD over
each of the two weeks. These items were based on the criteria for
diagnosing ADHD in adults as specified by the American Psychiatric
Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-V).
The inattentiveness questions covered a wide range of potential
problems, such as making careless mistakes, forgetting to pay a bill and
having difficulty sustaining attention or listening to others. The
hyperactivity questions were similarly broad, assessing things like
fidgeting, feeling restless, excessive talking and interrupting others.
The results were clear: more frequent phone interruptions made people less attentive and more hyperactive.
Because ADHD is a neurodevelopmental disorder with complex
neurological and developmental causes, these findings in no way suggest
that smartphones can cause ADHD. And our research certainly does not
show that reducing phone interruptions can treat ADHD. But our findings
do have implications for all of us who feel interrupted by our phones.
Smartphone ubiquity poses risks
These findings should concern us. Smartphones are the fastest-selling
electronic gadget in history – in the 22 seconds it took to type this
sentence, 1,000 smartphones were shipped to their new owners. Even if
one of those 1,000 users became more likely to make a careless mistake,
ignore a friend in the middle of a conversation or space out during a
meeting, smartphones could be harming the productivity, relationships
and well-being of millions.
As with all disorders, symptoms of ADHD form a continuum from the
normal to the pathological. Our findings suggest that our incessant
digital stimulation is contributing to an increasingly problematic
deficit of attention in modern society. So consider silencing your phone
– even when you are not in the movie theater. Your brain will thank
you. The Conversation
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