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      The Media Psychology of Boredom and Mobile Media Use : Theoretical and Methodological Innovations

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          Abstract

          Abstract. Boredom is a prevalent and relevant, yet understudied, negative emotion in the field of media psychology. This paper proposes novel theoretical foundations to study boredom as an emotion and its related regulation strategies in the context of mobile media. Due to their pervasive nature, mobile media allow for boredom regulation via passive and (inter)active exposure to a wide variety of media contents. It is still unclear how and through which processes mobile media provide successful boredom regulation. This paper first describes the existing scarce and mostly older literature on boredom from the field of media psychology and links this to recent insights from general psychology with as its core the meaning and attentional components (MAC) model ( Westgate & Wilson, 2018 ). It then integrates media psychology predictions for mobile media into the MAC model and identifies gaps and opportunities to be tackled in future media psychology studies, by also taking into account the broader boredom findings from within general psychology, for example, those focusing on the meaning component. Finally, the paper provides a summary of the psychological and neurobiological mechanisms giving rise to boredom and proposes methodological innovations for studying the research questions that are still left unanswered. The aim is to inspire future media psychology research on boredom as a highly relevant emotional state and how boredom regulation through mobile media use for can be both a challenge and an opportunity for individuals’ well-being.

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          Most cited references77

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          Ecological Momentary Assessment

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            The emerging field of emotion regulation: An integrative review.

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              Heart rate variability: a review.

              Heart rate variability (HRV) is a reliable reflection of the many physiological factors modulating the normal rhythm of the heart. In fact, they provide a powerful means of observing the interplay between the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. It shows that the structure generating the signal is not only simply linear, but also involves nonlinear contributions. Heart rate (HR) is a nonstationary signal; its variation may contain indicators of current disease, or warnings about impending cardiac diseases. The indicators may be present at all times or may occur at random-during certain intervals of the day. It is strenuous and time consuming to study and pinpoint abnormalities in voluminous data collected over several hours. Hence, HR variation analysis (instantaneous HR against time axis) has become a popular noninvasive tool for assessing the activities of the autonomic nervous system. Computer based analytical tools for in-depth study of data over daylong intervals can be very useful in diagnostics. Therefore, the HRV signal parameters, extracted and analyzed using computers, are highly useful in diagnostics. In this paper, we have discussed the various applications of HRV and different linear, frequency domain, wavelet domain, nonlinear techniques used for the analysis of the HRV.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                zmp
                Journal of Media Psychology
                Hogrefe Publishing
                1864-1105
                2151-2388
                March 31, 2022
                March 2022
                : 34
                : 2 , Special Issue: Theoretical Consolidation and Innovation in Media Psychology
                : 113-125
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Communication Studies, University of Antwerp, Belgium
                Author notes
                Karolien Poels, Department of Communication Studies, University of Antwerp, Sint Jacobstraat 2, 2000 Antwerp, Belgium karolien.poels@ 123456uantwerpen.be
                Article
                zmp_34_2_113
                10.1027/1864-1105/a000340
                c8e7ec2e-9feb-4bc6-83d4-2eb58aef9c5d
                Copyright @ 2022
                History
                : June 30, 2020
                : December 26, 2021
                : January 28, 2022
                Categories
                Theoretical Article

                Psychology,Communication & Media studies
                media psychology,emotions,boredom,mobile phone,emotion regulation

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