| Literature DB >> 28487665 |
Henry H Wilmer1, Lauren E Sherman1, Jason M Chein1.
Abstract
While smartphones and related mobile technologies are recognized as flexible and powerful tools that, when used prudently, can augment human cognition, there is also a growing perception that habitual involvement with these devices may have a negative and lasting impact on users' ability to think, remember, pay attention, and regulate emotion. The present review considers an intensifying, though still limited, area of research exploring the potential cognitive impacts of smartphone-related habits, and seeks to determine in which domains of functioning there is accruing evidence of a significant relationship between smartphone technology and cognitive performance, and in which domains the scientific literature is not yet mature enough to endorse any firm conclusions. We focus our review primarily on three facets of cognition that are clearly implicated in public discourse regarding the impacts of mobile technology - attention, memory, and delay of gratification - and then consider evidence regarding the broader relationships between smartphone habits and everyday cognitive functioning. Along the way, we highlight compelling findings, discuss limitations with respect to empirical methodology and interpretation, and offer suggestions for how the field might progress toward a more coherent and robust area of scientific inquiry.Entities:
Keywords: attention; delay of gratification and delay discounting; everyday cognition; media multitasking; memory; mobile technology; smartphones
Year: 2017 PMID: 28487665 PMCID: PMC5403814 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Representative publications exploring associations between technology usage and cognitive domains.
| Reference | Finding summary |
|---|---|
| Frequent media multitaskers are better at task switching; No correlation with dual-task performance | |
| Effect of media multitasking on distractor filtering is due to differences in attentional scope rather than working memory capacity | |
| Within-phone interruptions cause up to a 4x delay in completion of a primary task | |
| Frequent media multitaskers exhibit better multisensory integration | |
| In the presence of distractor stimuli during a sustained attention task, frequent media multitaskers perform worse and exhibit more right prefrontal activity | |
| Frequent media multitaskers perform worse on a task-switching paradigm, due to reduced ability to filter out interference | |
| Frequent media multitaskers report higher levels of everyday attention failures; No relationship between media multitasking habits and memory failures, attention switching, or distractibility | |
| No relationship between habitual media multitasking and sustained-attention processes | |
| In an attention-demanding task, mobile phone notifications cause a disruption in performance similar in magnitude to active phone usage | |
| The “mere presence” of a cell phone may produce diminished attention and worsened task-performance, especially for tasks with high cognitive demands | |
| Frequent media multitaskers exhibit split visual focal attention, whereas infrequent media multitaskers exhibit unitary visual focal attention | |
| Forcing users to perform mental rotations, rather than automating them, enhances spatial knowledge acquisition | |
| Navigation system use impairs cognitive map building | |
| More frequent media multitasking correlates with poorer working memory performance and lower standardized test scores | |
| Frequent Facebook users exhibit poorer performance on a free recall task | |
| Taking a digital photograph reduces recall accuracy for details of specific images; This effect is mitigated by zooming in on the object | |
| The use of navigation systems produces spatial knowledge impairments, but these can be mitigated by requiring users to request their position | |
| Older adults with significant internet experience show increased fMRI activity during internet search relative to those who are ‘net naïve’ | |
| When people assume that they have future access to information, they exhibit lower rates of recall for that information, but remember where that information can be accessed | |
| Frequent media multitaskers exhibit poorer working-memory performance and increased attentional impulsivity | |
| Internet/Email use predicts better performance on a delayed recall task in the elderly | |
| Administering smartphones to a smartphone-naïve sample results in greater delay discounting and decreased information-processing ability | |
| Frequent media multitaskers report greater impulsivity and sensation seeking along with poorer working memory performance | |
| Cognitive needs are not satisfied by media multitasking; Emotional gratifications are obtained despite not being sought | |
| Greater investment in mobile devices correlates with weaker tendency to delay gratification. This relationship is mediated by impulse control | |
| Different patterns of media multitasking result in different sorts of gratification | |
| More mobile phone usage predicts faster but less accurate Stroop performance | |
| Frequent social media users commit more false positives in a Go/No-Go paradigm | |
| More smartphone usage correlates with more intuitive, less analytic thinking | |
| Frequent media multitaskers report problems with everyday executive functioning; No relationship between media multitasking and performance on cognitive assessments | |
| Enforcing mobile phone bans in school is associated with better academic performance | |
| Instant messaging while reading results in slower reading times, but no difference in comprehension; Higher rates of instant messaging are correlated with lower academic performance | |
| Negative correlation between electronic media usage and academic performance; Positive correlation between media usage and face-to-face interaction | |
| Text messaging and Facebook use during class are negatively correlated with GPA; Email, internet searching, and talking are not correlated with GPA | |
| Facebook use is negatively correlated with GPA; Use for socializing (e.g., status updates), rather than collecting and sharing info (viewing/posting pictures), drives the correlation | |
| Texting, Facebook, and conducting internet searches unrelated to academic activity concurrent with homework completion all negatively correlate with GPA | |
| Social media use is negatively correlated with academic performance; The correlation is moderated by multitasking habits in a US sample, but not in a European sample | |
| Facebook use is negatively correlated with GPA and hours per week spent studying | |
| Positive correlation between smartphone usage and anxiety; Negative correlation between smartphone usage and academic performance | |
| Time spent instant messaging correlates with higher rates of distractibility during academic tasks | |
| Individuals unable to access email for 5 days are less stressed, multitask less, and maintain longer task focus at work | |
| Frequent media multitaskers exhibit greater impulsivity and lower fluid intelligence; No relationship between media multitasking and task-switching | |
| Time spent on social networking sites is negatively correlated with everyday attention | |
| Accessing Facebook while studying is negatively correlated with GPA | |
| In-class multitasking with a laptop is negatively correlated with academic performance for the user and all others within sightline of the screen | |