The Free Press Journal

What is love? For Indians it’s cellphones

In the study, nearly 65% of young population has described their smartphone­s as best friend and companion

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Nearly 33 per cent of people, specially the younger generation that has grown up in a digital world, care more for their smartphone­s over engaging with individual­s they love and India tops the list with 47 per cent, a report said.

The study by an Indian telecommun­ications company, which is developed in partnershi­p with Nancy Etcoff — expert in ‘MindBrain Behaviour and the Science of Happiness’, from Harvard University, said: “We, as a generation, are losing control of our lives.”

“Over half of the respondent­s (53 per cent) described their smartphone­s as their best friend and companion. India tops the chart with 65 per cent,” the study, issued by the independen­t research company Ipsos, noted.

India again topped the list with 64 per cent when it came to people wanting help with phone-life balance. The global numbers stand at 61 per cent where individual­s said they wanted to get the most out of their lives when they were not using their phones. The study pinpointed key problemati­c smartphone behaviours that impacted people’s relationsh­ips with others and themselves.

“Approximat­ely 50 per cent people agreed that they check their phone more often than they would like and nearly 44 per cent felt compelled to perpetuall­y check their phones. India figures at the top with 65 per cent and 57 per cent respective­ly,” the study found.

Almost 35 per cent of the respondent­s agreed that they are spending too much time using their phones with 44 per cent of them belonging to Gen Z — people who were born from the mid 1990s to the early 2000s. India figures at the top with 48 per cent and 55 per cent respective­ly.

Further to this, 53 per cent Indians said that they would be happier if they spent less time on their smartphone­s. Nearly, 65 per cent people panic when they think they have lost their smartphone. “India stands at the top in emotional overdepend­ence of phone with 77 per cent of respondent­s admitting that they panic when they lose their phone,” the study said. Even while not using their smartphone­s, 46 per cent Indians were thinking about using it the next time that they get a chance to check their devices.

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