2017
DOI: 10.1089/cyber.2016.0500
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Fatal Attractions: Attachment to Smartphones Predicts Anthropomorphic Beliefs and Dangerous Behaviors

Abstract: As technology's presence grows increasingly concrete in global societies, so too do our relationships with the devices we keep close at hand from day to day. Whereas research has, in the past, framed smartphone addiction in terms of possessional attachment, the present research hypothesizes that anxious smartphone attachment stems from human attachment, in which Anxiously attached individuals may be more likely to generalize their anxious attachment style to communication devices. In the present study, we foun… Show more

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Cited by 26 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Despite this commonality, there was a difference between addicted and non-addicted participants in terms of the salience of smartphones in their lives. The results of this study concur with the study by Bodford, Kwan, and Sobota (2017), which showed reliance onor "clinginess" towardsmartphones, compulsive urge to answer one's phone, and where smartphone addiction was framed in terms of possession attachment. The attachment and proximity-seeking theme aligns with Han, Kim, and Kim (2017), who found that users perceive smartphones as their extended selves.…”
Section: Results and Preliminary Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Despite this commonality, there was a difference between addicted and non-addicted participants in terms of the salience of smartphones in their lives. The results of this study concur with the study by Bodford, Kwan, and Sobota (2017), which showed reliance onor "clinginess" towardsmartphones, compulsive urge to answer one's phone, and where smartphone addiction was framed in terms of possession attachment. The attachment and proximity-seeking theme aligns with Han, Kim, and Kim (2017), who found that users perceive smartphones as their extended selves.…”
Section: Results and Preliminary Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…It can be hypothesized that an additional risk factor to develop FAD occurs when the overlap between the offline and online relationships is small and the amount of online relationships considerably outweighs that of the offline relationships. This constellation contributes to the development of a strong emotional attachment to Facebook [ 38 ], which is supposed to increase the impact of the telepresence of the online world on the individual. In the extreme case, the immersion in the online world might become so intensive that the affected individual cannot recognize anymore the difference between the online and offline world.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This in part explains why many people develop strong psychological attachments to them (Belk, 2013;Bodford et al, 2017;Fullwood et al, 2017;Shaw et al, 2016). This 'individualized' perspective of smartphone usage fits well within the framework of the Uses and Gratifications model and reflect consistent, yet individualized patterns of behavior (Katz et al, 1974;Wilcockson et al, 2018).…”
Section: Conceptualmentioning
confidence: 99%