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The Phone Walkers: A study of human dependence on inactive mobile devices

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arxiv 1804.08753 v1 pith:MXMEUEGS submitted 2018-04-23 physics.soc-ph

The Phone Walkers: A study of human dependence on inactive mobile devices

classification physics.soc-ph
keywords mobilephonesclearwhilstdevicesholdinghumaninteractions
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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The development of mobile phones has largely increased human interactions. Whilst the use of these devices for communication has received significant attention, there has been little analysis of more passive interactions. Through census data on casual social groups, this work suggests a clear pattern of mobile phones being carried in people's hands, without the person using it (that is, not looking at it). Moreover, this study suggests that when individuals join members of the opposite sex there is a clear tendency to stop holding mobile phones whilst walking. Although it is not clear why people hold their phones whilst walking in such large proportions (38% of solitary women, and 31% of solitary men), we highlight several possible explanation for holding the device, including the need to advertise status and affluence, to maintain immediate connection with friends and family, and to mitigate feelings related to anxiety and security.

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