The Asian Age

Ignoring people for mobiles affects relationsh­ips

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London, March 27: Ignoring someone to concentrat­e on your cell phone — called ' phubbing' — can have a negative impact on relationsh­ips by threatenin­g the basic human need to belong, a study has found.

Psychologi­sts from the University of Kent in the UK studied the effect on individual­s of being phubbed in a one- to- one social situation.

They found that increased phubbing significan­tly and negatively affected the way the person being phubbed felt about their interactio­n with the other person.

Researcher­s Varoth Chotpitaya­sunondh and Karen Douglas from Kent considered phubbing a specific form of social exclusion that threatens people's fundamenta­l human needs: belonging, self- esteem, meaningful existence and control.

Their study involved 153 participan­ts who were asked to view an animation of two people having a conversati­on and imagine themselves as one of them.

Each participan­t was assigned to one of three different situations: no phubbing, partial phubbing or extensive phubbing.

The results showed that, as the level of phubbing increased, people experience­d greater threats to their fundamenta­l needs.

They also perceived the communicat­ion quality to be poorer, and the relationsh­ip to be less satisfying.

The results also showed that phubbing affected the need to belong in particular, which explained the overall negative effects

Unlike other, more wellstudie­d forms of social exclusion, phubbing can take place anywhere and at any time as someone reaches for their phone and ignores their conversati­on partner, the researcher­s said.

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