Smartphone Addiction and Social Support: A Three-year Longitudinal Study

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Abstract

For some years now, scholars have been exploring some of the negative consequences for the psychosocial well-being of users that the rapid incorporation of smartphones into our lives has caused. Most of the empirical studies to date are cross-sectional and are carried out with participants from convenience samples, which has been a limitation in this field. In this study, we evaluated the evolution over three years of smartphone addiction and social support in 241 Spanish users of a representative national sample. The results of the analysis of latent growth and growth mixture modeling indicate that both trajectories are interconnected: the more addiction decreases, the more social support increases. In addition, high levels of addiction and relatively low levels of support remained stable over time in a group of users. Users of this high-addiction group would represent a trend in the digital society characterized by higher rates of loneliness and technological dependence.

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Herrero, J., Torres, A., Vivas, P., & Urueña, A. (2019). Smartphone Addiction and Social Support: A Three-year Longitudinal Study. Psychosocial Intervention, 28(3), 111–118. https://doi.org/10.5093/pi2019a6

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