ADD ANI AS A TRUSTED SOURCE
googleads
ANI Logo
Menu
Others

Smartphone usage rises in city parks but falls in forests: Study

While getting outside is a typical prescription for decreasing screen time, a new study indicates that being outside doesn't always lower smartphone screen time.

ANI May 15, 2023 21:02 IST googleads

Representative Image

Washington [US], May 15 (ANI): While getting outside is a typical prescription for decreasing screen time, a new study indicates that being outside doesn't always lower smartphone screen time.
The new research, which tracked smartphone activity of 700 study participants for two years, reveals that participants' smartphone activity actually increased during visits to city parks and other urban green spaces.
With smartphone use rising worldwide, the study clearly identifies a powerful way to reduce screen time: participants who visited nature reserves or forests saw significant declines in screentime over the first three hours, compared to visiting urban locations for the same amount of time.
The study, published in the journal Environment and Behavior, is the first to show that young adults now spend far more time on their smartphone screens than in nature, the researchers say. Given unparalleled access to participants' devices, the team found that young adults in the study spent over twice as much time on their smartphones as they spent outdoors.
"Greentime, or time outdoors, has long been recommended as a way to restore our attention from the demands of daily life, yet before our study, little was known about whether nature provides a way for people to disconnect from the mobile devices that now follow us into the great outdoors," said lead author Kelton Minor, a Postdoctoral Research Scientist at Columbia University's Data Science Institute. "While past research suggested that short trips to city parks might provide a digital detox, we saw texting and phone calls actually go up. It was really the longer visits to wilder areas, like forests or nature preserves, that helped people get off their screens and wrest back their attention from their smartphones."
A key advance of the study is the novelty of data' richness compared to other smartphone studies, where participants typically self-report their smartphone use or environmental behaviors. In this study, participants consented to share their smartphone data--over 2.5 million privacy-preserving logs of activity from texts, calls and screen time--for science.
"Smartphones have an incredibly powerful pull on our attention, which will undoubtedly increase in the future--that's what many technology companies are working on," says University of Vermont (UVM) co-author Chris Danforth, a Gund Fellow who will co-lead a new $20M big data project on the science of storytelling. "Given the reported connections between mental health and our digital life, we need more studies like this to help establish ways to encourage a healthier relationship with technology."
Discussing their findings, the researchers theorize that urban greenspace may instead be useful in enhancing remote social ties--hence the increase in texts and phone calls in urban parks--but may interrupt the individual's opportunity to utilize the attention-restoring properties of nature.
Increased smartphone use has been linked to rising cases in anxiety, depression, and sleep problems, especially in younger generations. At the same time, research from UVM and others has shown that nature has restorative benefits for our minds and bodies that deliver a sense of joy comparable to a holiday like Thanksgiving or New Year's. Researchers theorize that the visual and sensory experiences of nature help strengthen individuals' ability to better focus on life beyond their smartphones.
The study is the first to compare time spent on smartphone screens to time spent in outdoor green spaces, according to the researchers. They found that even the young adults who typically used their smartphones the most reduced their usage in nature areas, providing evidence that more wild greentime may provide a digital break for even the most connected. (ANI)

Get the App

What to Read Next

Culture

A Year-End Mea Culpa: Stitching Scars with Gold

A Year-End Mea Culpa: Stitching Scars with Gold

And so, I find myself staring at a rent in the weave--a gaping wound I caused, an absence that echoes like an empty stage after the lights have dimmed.

Read More
Culture

The Virtues of an Open Heart

The Virtues of an Open Heart

I was only 20 when I landed in Manhattan, bright-eyed, brimming with ambition, and carrying little more than a suitcase filled with dreams. Manhattan, that untamed beast of a city, can intimidate even the braves

Read More
Fitness

World Endodontic Day: Save your natural teeth from extractions

World Endodontic Day: Save your natural teeth from extractions

Dentists are celebrating October 16th as World Endodontic Day to spread general awareness among people about the need to preserve their natural teeth from root canal infection and extractions.

Read More
Fashion

"50 Balmain pieces stolen" just days before Paris Fashion Week

The Paris Fashion Week will be held between September 25 and October 3. Balmain's show is scheduled in the French capital on September 27.

Read More
Culture

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

Vishwakarma Puja 2023: Important aspects observed during this day

‘Vishwakarma Jayanti’ is a Hindu festival that celebrates Lord Vishwakarma, the divine architect and craftsman of the gods. It is celebrated on September 17 this year.

Read More
Relationships

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Moral reasoning displays characteristic patterns in brain: Study

Philosophers, psychologists and neuroscientists have passionately argued whether moral judgments share something distinctive that separates them from non-moral matters. Moral monists claim that morality is unified by a common characteristic and that all moral issues involve concerns about harm.

Read More
Parenting

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

Kindergarten misbehaviour may cost society in the long run: Study

For the first time, a new economic analysis has linked kindergarten pupils' misbehaviour to significant societal costs in terms of criminality, associated medical expenses, and lost productivity as they grow up.

Read More
Quirky

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Sense of order distinguishes humans from other animals: Study

Already earlier research at Stockholm University has suggested that only humans have the ability to recognize and remember so-called sequential information and that this ability is a fundamental building block underlying unique human cultural abilities.

Read More
Travel

Synchronizing with internal clocks help mitigate jet lag: Study

Synchronizing with internal clocks help mitigate jet lag: Study

Travelling to exotic locations is an excellent way to broaden one's horizons, but jet lag may be an unpleasant side effect. Adjusting to a new time zone is frequently accompanied by weariness, difficulties sleeping, and a slew of other issues that may turn an otherwise great vacation into an unpleasant one.

Read More
Quirky

Exciting the brain might be key to boosting maths learning: Study

Exciting the brain might be key to boosting maths learning: Study

According to a new study from the Universities of Surrey and Oxford, Loughborough University, and Radboud University in the Netherlands, activating a brain region with electrical noise stimulation may improve mathematical learning in those who struggle with the subject.

Read More
Home About Us Our Products Advertise Contact Us Terms & Condition Privacy Policy

Copyright © aninews.in | All Rights Reserved.