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In the September 2017 issue of The Atlantic, Twenge argued that smartphones were the most likely cause behind the sudden increases in mental health issues among teens after 2012. [ 15 ] [ 16 ] Twenge co-authored a 2017 corpus linguistics analysis that said that George Carlin 's " seven dirty words you can't say on television" were used 28 times ...
Gen Z will make up 30% of the workforce by 2030, EY's global chair and CEO Janet Truncale told a Davos panel titled "Gen Z changes the map.". At EY, the pace of generational transformation is even ...
Forms of technology addiction have been considered as diagnoses since the mid 1990s. [3] In current research on the adverse consequences of technology overuse, "mobile phone overuse" has been proposed as a subset of forms of "digital addiction" or "digital dependence", reflecting increasing trends of compulsive behavior among users of technological devices. [4]
Diving into how the current generation of high schoolers uses their phones for her docuseries, “Social Studies,” which is streaming on Hulu and FX, Greenfield found social media has changed ...
So far, more than 50,000 families have signed a collective action pledge to hold off on handing out smartphones. You can't just take away smartphones Simply forbidding smartphones isn't the answer ...
The Anxious Generation: How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental Illness is a 2024 book by Jonathan Haidt which argues that the spread of smartphones, social media and overprotective parenting have led to a "rewiring" of childhood and a rise in mental illness. [1] [2]
Experts from many different fields have conducted research and held debates about how using social media affects mental health.Research suggests that mental health issues arising from social media use affect women more than men and vary according to the particular social media platform used, although it does affect every age and gender demographic in different ways.
The most engaged parents have formed pairs of activists in schools across Spain and are pushing for fellow parents to agree not to get their kids smartphones until they are 16.