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      Studying problems, not problematic usage: Do mobile checking habits increase procrastination and decrease well-being?

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      Mobile Media & Communication
      SAGE Publications

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          Abstract

          Most prior research on the effects of mobile and social media on well-being has worked from either the “technology addiction” or “screen time” approach. Yet these frameworks struggle with considerable conceptual and methodological limitations. The present study discusses and tests an established but understudied alternative, the technology habit approach. Instead of conflating mobile usage with problems (i.e., addictive/problematic usage) or ignoring users’ psychological engagement with mobiles (i.e., screen time), this approach investigates how person-level (habit strength) and day-level aspects of mobile habits (perceived interruptions and the urge to check) contribute to a key problem outcome, procrastination, as well as affective well-being and meaningfulness. In a five-day diary study with N = 532 student smartphone users providing N = 2,331 diary entries, mobile checking habit strength, perceived interruptions, and the urge to check together explained small to moderate amounts of procrastination. Procrastination, in turn, was linked to lower affective well-being and meaningfulness. Yet mobile habits showed only very small or no direct associations with affective well-being and meaningfulness. By separating habitual mobile connectivity from problem outcomes and well-being measures, this research demonstrates a promising alternative to the study of digital well-being.

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          Multilevel analysis: An introduction to basic and advanced multilevel modeling

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            The Routledge handbook of media use and well‐being. International perspectives on theory and research on positive media effects

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              Introduction: Conceptualizing the Relations of Procrastination to Health and Well-Being

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Mobile Media & Communication
                Mobile Media & Communication
                SAGE Publications
                2050-1579
                2050-1587
                August 04 2021
                : 205015792110293
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Friedrich Alexander University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany
                Article
                10.1177/20501579211029326
                7aad581e-eb56-4d9c-99c7-eadf956b5334
                © 2021

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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