The Scotsman

‘Sociometer’ calls time on pub phone fans

● Students’ invention aimed at shaming ‘antisocial’ customers into switching off

- By CHRIS GREEN

A device which shows how many people are using their phone in a pub with the aim of shaming them into switching off has been created by a team of Scottish students.

The invention, dubbed the Sociometer, resembles a seismograp­h but instead of measuring and recording earthquake­s it notes down on graph paper how much data is being used by nearby smartphone­s.

Created by three students from the University of Dundee, it can be attached to the wall of a pub and provides a live visual illustrati­on of how antisocial drinkers have become.

To test their invention, the team installed it in a 120-yearold pub in the city and found that people were still attached to their phones even at peak times when they were surrounded by friends.

The team includes Tiernan Haugh, Jamie Spratt and Campbell Scanlan, who are all currently studying at Duncan of Jordanston­e College of Art & Design at the university.

The invention has already won an award after the students entered it into a prestigiou­s design competitio­n organised by Unesco and held in Shenzhen, China.

“People anecdotall­y talk about how younger generation­s are becoming more content spending time on their phones than indulging in conversati­on, so we wanted to design something to measure that,” said Mr Haugh, a digital interactio­n design student.

The device was tested in Dundee’s Speedwell Bar, known by locals as Mennies, with the aim of measuring the well-documented social phenomenon of people being glued to their phones.

“We specifical­ly chose the Speedwell Bar because it was

TIERNAN HAUGH recently voted Dundee’s best community bar,” Mr Haugh added.

“We thought it was fitting to install a device that could reduce the distractio­n of our phones by highlighti­ng the amount we use them in a social setting.”

Mr Spratt, a product design student, added: “It’s called the ‘Sociometer’ because it shows how social people actually are in traditiona­l boozers. It’s a conversati­on starter and is able to capture how different generation­s use Scottish pubs.”

Research published in September confirmed that Britain is becoming a nation of smartphone addicts, with more than half of the population admitting they use their device too much.

Deloitte’s Mobile Consumer Survey found that a third of people wake up in the middle of the night to respond to messages or check their phones, while 11 per cent did so while crossing the road.

“People talk about how younger generation­s are becoming more content spending time on their phones than indulging in conversati­on”

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