Smartphones are a constant companion in everyday life. Interacting with a smartphone calls for a multimodal input and often leads to a multisensory output. Combining research in human-computer interaction (HCI) and psychology, the present research explored the idea that a smartphone is more than a smart object but represents an object to which people feel emotionally attached to and which is even perceived as a part or an extension of a person’s self. To this end, we used an established rubber hand illusion paradigm to experimentally induce body ownership experiences in young adults (n = 76) in a 4-level mixed-design study. Our results revealed that in contrast to a neutral control object participants indeed felt attached to a smartphone, p...
This research explores the extent to which Smartphones and Smartphone apps can be viewed as an exten...
The project was guided by the overarching question: “What does smartphone-mediated communication fee...
Millions of people in the United States and worldwide own smartphones (Poushter, Bishop, & Chwe, 201...
Smartphones are a constant companion in everyday life. Interacting with a smartphone calls for a mul...
Smartphones are a constant companion in everyday life. Interacting with a smartphone calls for a mul...
Six billion people worldwide will be using smartphones in 2020 (Jonsson et al., 2017). The devices p...
Smartphones became a dominant medium for communication with the emergence of converging technology. ...
As mobile phones have evolved into Smartphones, they have become more than simple communication tool...
The project was guided by the overarching question: “What does smartphone-mediated communication fee...
Smartphone use is ubiquitous, however, scholarly debate regarding the addictive nature of smartphone...
Smartphone use is ubiquitous, however, scholarly debate regarding the addictive nature of smartphone...
Technological progress provides us with an increasing variety of devices that now mediate what previ...
By gathering data on people during their ordinary daily activities, we tested if looking at, but not...
This paper explores how some people use their mobile phone to manage their emotions and presentation...
As mobile phones have evolved into Smartphones, they have become more than simple communication tool...
This research explores the extent to which Smartphones and Smartphone apps can be viewed as an exten...
The project was guided by the overarching question: “What does smartphone-mediated communication fee...
Millions of people in the United States and worldwide own smartphones (Poushter, Bishop, & Chwe, 201...
Smartphones are a constant companion in everyday life. Interacting with a smartphone calls for a mul...
Smartphones are a constant companion in everyday life. Interacting with a smartphone calls for a mul...
Six billion people worldwide will be using smartphones in 2020 (Jonsson et al., 2017). The devices p...
Smartphones became a dominant medium for communication with the emergence of converging technology. ...
As mobile phones have evolved into Smartphones, they have become more than simple communication tool...
The project was guided by the overarching question: “What does smartphone-mediated communication fee...
Smartphone use is ubiquitous, however, scholarly debate regarding the addictive nature of smartphone...
Smartphone use is ubiquitous, however, scholarly debate regarding the addictive nature of smartphone...
Technological progress provides us with an increasing variety of devices that now mediate what previ...
By gathering data on people during their ordinary daily activities, we tested if looking at, but not...
This paper explores how some people use their mobile phone to manage their emotions and presentation...
As mobile phones have evolved into Smartphones, they have become more than simple communication tool...
This research explores the extent to which Smartphones and Smartphone apps can be viewed as an exten...
The project was guided by the overarching question: “What does smartphone-mediated communication fee...
Millions of people in the United States and worldwide own smartphones (Poushter, Bishop, & Chwe, 201...