Keep Your Head Up: How Smartphone Addiction Kills Manners and Moods – The New York Times

“The social scientist Sherry Turkle analyzed 30 years of family interactions in her book “Alone Together: Why We Expect More From Technology and Less From Each Other.” She found that children now compete with their parents’ devices for attention, resulting in a generation afraid of the spontaneity of a phone call or face-to-face interaction. Eye contact now seems to be optional, Dr. Turkle suggests, and sensory overload can often mean our feelings are constantly anesthetized.”

Kilde: Keep Your Head Up: How Smartphone Addiction Kills Manners and Moods – The New York Times

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