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Cellphone Study Finds Link Between Selfishness And Mobile Phone Use

Cellphone Study

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 02/16/2012 5:20 pm Updated: 02/16/2012 5:33 pm

Two studies out of the University of Maryland appear to confirm a long-held suspicion about cellphone use: people get selfish when they're on their phones.

According to a press release, researchers at the University of Maryland's Robert H. Smith School of Business found that when people are using or thinking about their phones they are less likely to engage in prosocial behavior. The study notes that prosocial behavior is characterized as "action intended to benefit another person or society as a whole."

In the experiment, college students were asked how likely they were to volunteer at a charity after using either Facebook or a cellphone without access to Facebook. After three minutes, they were asked how likely they were to volunteer at a charity organization. Participants who had used their phones were less likely to say they would volunteer than those who had browsed Facebook immediately before.

In a pretest people had reported feeling more connected to others when using their cellphones than when using Facebook, and that finding coupled with the fact that people were less likely to volunteer after using their phones lead the researchers to conclude that there was a correlation between level of connectedness and willingness to volunteer, i.e. the more connected to others people feel, the less likely they are to volunteer.

"The cellphone directly evokes feelings of connectivity to others, thereby fulfilling the basic human need to belong," the studies' authors write in a working paper titled "The Effect of Mobile Phone Use on Prosocial Behavior."

According to marketing professor Rosellina Ferraro, a co-author of the report who spoke with The Huffington Post, the cellphone didn't even need to be present to produce these results.

In a second study participants were asked to draw a picture of either their TV or their cellphone and to think about how they used whichever gadget they were drawing. Afterwards, the cellphone group was less engaged than the TV group in a problem-solving task, even though all participants knew that completion of the task meant money was being donated to charity.

It's important to note that since this is a working study these findings have not been published or peer-reviewed. According to the University of Maryland's student newspaper, The Diamond, the study will not be published until additional follow-up research has been conducted on the more general effects of cellphone use on how people act in social situations.

According to Ferraro, one direction additional research may go is to look at whether an even more socially fulfilling activity, like say talking to your friend on Skype, makes people even less likely to behave in a prosocial manner.

Our smartphones keep us connected, but there are other studies that suggest the gadgets are taking a toll on our mental health. An article in the BMC Public Health journal, for example, concluded that high mobile phone use corresponded with "sleep disturbances and symptoms of depression" in men, and symptoms of depression in women. Some companies have made an effort to limit the time their employees spend with their devices, such as Volkswagen, which blocks email on some employees' BlackBerry devices after work hours.

Are you surprised cellphones were linked with more selfish behavior? Weigh in below.

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Two studies out of the University of Maryland appear to confirm a long-held suspicion about cellphone use: people get selfish when they're on their phones. According to a press release, researcher...
Two studies out of the University of Maryland appear to confirm a long-held suspicion about cellphone use: people get selfish when they're on their phones. According to a press release, researcher...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bondcliff
you really don't know me
12:15 AM on 02/18/2012
Two words. "Electronic crack" If you don't see it, your in denial.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bunny Tickle Britches
♥ Cupcakes For Everyone! ♥
05:51 PM on 02/17/2012
Most people are shellfish.

The have no nervous system, claws for grabbing things, and live at the bottom of the ocean.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lewmanbubba
11:32 AM on 02/17/2012
If people get MORE selfish on phones or face book. I got a shock for you they already were selfish that is
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MikeW CA
Rule of Law - it works for all
09:49 AM on 02/17/2012
What if they use Facebook on their phone?
08:15 AM on 02/17/2012
With Facebook online, narcism will become desease number one.
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04:12 AM on 02/17/2012
We were selfish long befor either.Technology just makes it easier.
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03:56 AM on 02/17/2012
Technology has made people self absorbed and social networking has made people feel more important than they really are....I don't give a flying @5$#!! about your personal life being spoken LOUDLY in a public place....
02:25 AM on 02/17/2012
Still not getting a facebook.
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Carmen Madonna Campos
dude! it's me!!!
10:38 PM on 02/16/2012
No, no, no.
Selfish people made iPhone and fb.
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Alwayslearning82
07:25 PM on 02/16/2012
Ummmm aren't people repeating checking Facebook from their phones? Pretty interesting that they didn't factor in that distinction in the experiment.
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GaryNOVA
Fear My Micro-bio!!!!!!!!
07:13 PM on 02/16/2012
nahhhh. I was already selfish before I had a cell phone.
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Pectin
Lie to me...
06:09 PM on 02/16/2012
"Which Makes People More Selfish: Cellphones Or Facebook?"

People are selfish or they aren't. Phones and websites do not make them so.
11:47 PM on 02/16/2012
I agree
06:41 AM on 02/17/2012
I think the point they're trying to make is that those who are selfish use their cellphones more so it is a way to determine those who are more selfish.