Smartphone and the changing practices of face-to-face interaction

Smartphone use has grown rapidly, but the ways it shapes concurrent face-to-face interaction remains scarcely studied. In our research we have formulated two new concepts to depict this: 1) Sticky media device illustrates situations in which a person using a screen media device is difficult to get f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Raudaskoski, Sanna, Mantere, Eerik, Valkonen, Satu
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 29.10.2019
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Summary:Smartphone use has grown rapidly, but the ways it shapes concurrent face-to-face interaction remains scarcely studied. In our research we have formulated two new concepts to depict this: 1) Sticky media device illustrates situations in which a person using a screen media device is difficult to get fully involved with ongoing face-to-face conversation. Their attention is not easily removed from the "sticky" device or returns to it quickly even if it is momentarily removed. This article adds to the theoretical underpinnings of the concept that we previously described mainly empirically. By 2) bystander inaccessibility we mean the difficulty of a bystander to a smartphone user to be aware of what kind of action the user is undertaking with the device and what the phase of the activity is. Our research is based on the theory of ethnomethodology. In addition to ethnomethodological analysis of interaction, we also apply other reseach methods. We illustrate the phenomena of sticky media device and bystander inaccessibility by analyzing 1) naturalistic video data, 2) written role playing materials and 3) quantitative data, all of which concentrate on the overlapping of smartphone use and face-to-face conversation.
ISSN:2331-8422