Cape Argus

Hung up on cellphone separation

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LOSING a cellphone can be a real nuisance, especially these days when people often seem to have their whole lives wrapped up in their handsets.

But research suggests young people start to get stressed even when they are separated from their smartphone­s for just a matter of minutes.

They are so attached to their devices that they start exhibiting the type of attachment behaviours usually reserved for a member of the family. And scientists found even a short time apart from their phone brought on heartbeat patterns associated with post-traumatic stress disorder.

Researcher­s at the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Eotvos Lorand University in Budapest conducted experiment­s on 87 smartphone owners in the age group 18 to 26.

Attached to heart monitors, they were given a simple computeris­ed maths test to complete with the assistance of the calculator on their phone.

Before being presented with a second set of questions, half were told to switch off their cellphones but keep them close by, while the rest had their phones removed and placed in a cupboard. Some were given an alternativ­e smartphone to use.

Those separated from their handsets were more likely to display signs of stress such as an increased heart rate.

The study, in the journal Computers and Human Behaviour, said: “The presence of an unfamiliar mobile decreased the effects of separation from their own mobile, similar to the calming effect of a stranger on children who are separated from the caregiver”. – Daily Mail

 ?? PICTURE: EPA ?? OVER-ATTACHED: Young people, wrapped up in their handsets, play Pokémon Go during the height of the craze last year.
PICTURE: EPA OVER-ATTACHED: Young people, wrapped up in their handsets, play Pokémon Go during the height of the craze last year.

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