Results 171 to 180 of about 2,135 (212)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

‘Phubbing is happening to you’: examining predictors and effects of phubbing behaviour in friendships

Behaviour & Information Technology, 2021
Phubbing is the act of snubbing someone during face-to-face interactions by using smartphones instead of paying attention to them.
Juhyung Sun, Jennifer A. Samp
openaire   +1 more source

Who “phubs”? A systematic meta-analytic review of phubbing predictors

Mobile Media & Communication, 2023
Phubbing (i.e., snubbing someone in face-to-face interactions by focusing on one's phone instead of those present) has increased enormously in recent years and has become a widespread usage phenomenon that is associated with negative consequences, for instance for relationships and friendships.
Anisha Arenz, Anna Schnauber-Stockmann
openaire   +1 more source

Phubbing

open access: yes
Die Längsschnittsstudie untersucht, ob das Phubbingverhalten mit dem individuellen Wohlbefinden zusammenhängt und inwiefern Persönlichkeitseigenschaften dabei eine Rolle spielen.
Thomas Reiter   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Phubbing: Which Personality Traits Are Prone to Phubbing?

Social Science Computer Review, 2019
Smartphones play an important role in our lives thanks to the opportunities they offer in terms of access, interaction, and communication. However, in addition to these positive aspects, smartphones have transformed into objects of dependence due to gaming, social media, and access to the Internet and are beginning to harm the ...
Evren Erzen   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

The Social Consequences of Phubbing

2020
Recent empirical work suggests that phubbing, a term used to describe the practice of snubbing someone with a phone during a face-to-face social interaction, harms the quality of social relationships. Based on a comprehensive literature review, this chapter presents a framework that integrates three concurrent mechanisms that explain the relational ...
openaire   +2 more sources

PHUBBING:

2022
Marina Fernández-Andújar   +2 more
  +4 more sources

Do Narcissist Phubs or Get Phubbed? Analyzing the Role of Motivational Systems

The Journal of Psychology
Phubbing is a common sight, but it is not merely a technological faux pas. The present study aims to explore phubbing (phubbing others and getting phubbed) through the lens of two types of personalities (grandiose and vulnerable narcissism). Moreover, the study also aimed to evaluate the indirect role of motivational systems (BAS/BIS) between these two
Kiran, Sakker Sudha   +2 more
openaire   +2 more sources

App Use While Phubbing

2020
Existing research on phubbing focused mainly on the effect of phubbing on individuals’ wellbeing and social relationships. No published work has investigated in detail which apps are commonly used by smartphone users while having a face-to-face conversation with others and which demographic characteristics influences the choice of these apps. An online
openaire   +1 more source

Phubbing among Croatian Students

2017
Background and aims: Phubbing is an emerging social phenomenon defined as looking at a smartphone during a face-to- face conversation. Phubbing is a global trend, but since it was acknowledged only several years ago, still little is known about its association with other Internet-related behaviors and well-being.
Kaliterna Lipovčan, Ljiljana   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Adaptation of General Scales of Phubbing and Being Phubbed into Turkish

2018
Phubbing, is mentioned frequently researches in recent years, occurs when people care their smart phones and ignore other people instead interpersonal communication or interaction during a meeting or another social environment. Phubbee, in other words being phubbed, is defined as person who interact with a phubber, care smart phone instead communicate ...
openaire   +2 more sources

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