Calculating the human cost of the all-consuming digital age

It is clear that the influence of technology can be damaging as well as beneficial, with negative effects on personal relationships and social media-induced anxiety becoming more apparent

 
Tech giants like Google, Facebook and Apple have been promoting tools for digital wellbeing in response to criticism they have been receiving for the damage their applications have inflicted
Tech giants like Google, Facebook and Apple have been promoting tools for digital wellbeing in response to criticism they have been receiving for the damage their applications have inflicted  

Of late, Apple, Google and Facebook have been under fire from numerous sources – and for good reason. While the benefits of such firms are vast and immeasurable, society is also suffering at the hands of their tools, which we have grown to rely on. In short, we’re addicted to our smartphones and to the various forms of social media that they offer. This addiction is causing a long list of problems: distracting us from school and work, harming our personal relationships, and even triggering anxiety disorders.

How can companies whose very purpose depends upon keeping users glued to their screens for as long as possible now encourage the very opposite?

In response, the bigwigs of the tech industry have introduced new tools and apps in the name of promoting digital wellbeing. Back in January, Mark Zuckerberg started off the New Year with a pledge to ensure that the time we spend on Facebook is “time well spent”. He said that, according to research, using social media to connect with those we care about can be good for our wellbeing – for that reason, product teams in the company will focus more on helping users find “more meaningful social interactions”, as opposed to more relevant content.

In May, Google introduced a set of time management tools for Android users to track their screen time and app usage. This included the introduction of Shush (which enables users to switch on ‘do not disturb’ by simply flipping over their phone) and Wind Down (which fades the screen to greyscale for bedtime) modes. Apple was quick to follow suit, announcing in June a series of new controls to monitor usage, while also setting time limits and better controls for notifications and for children. Also in June, Facebook-owned Instagram rolled out a new browsing alert that says: “You’re all caught up – you’ve seen all new posts from the past 48 hours.” This was designed to prevent mindless – and seemingly endless – scrolling.

Recognising a problem
Although the likes of Facebook, Google and Apple are now serving up these thoughtful initiatives, it is these very companies that delivered our digital ‘ill being’ in the first place. They have done so by entering the human psyche and exploiting it, keeping us checking our phones more frequently and for longer bouts at a time. “Psychology and behavioural science are increasingly of interest to digital media platforms,” said Luke Stark, a researcher at Microsoft and fellow at the Berkman Klein Centre for Internet and Society at Harvard University. “Those academic fields are getting incorporated into the design of these systems.”

73

Number of times a day young adults check their phones

260

Average number of minutes a young adult spends on their phone each day

Nowadays, every company in the business employs behavioural psychologists or uses certain techniques to keep consumers using their apps and devices for as long as possible – glued eyeballs are how they make their money, after all. “And the funny thing is, it’s not rocket science. It’s actually pretty straightforward behaviourism, and every company does it – they all have their own tricks,” said Dr Larry Rosen, a research psychologist and author of several books on the psychology of technology.

Instagram, for example, doesn’t send notifications individually – instead, it batches them together, delivering a few at a time, which is much more reinforcing and dopamine-inducing. Snapchat, which is used primarily by teenagers, features ‘streaks’, which keep track of how many days in a row a user has sent and received a snap from each person. “And that is a perfect behavioural way to keep you sucked in,” said Rosen. Stories of teenagers giving their friends their login details so they can keep up their streaks while on vacation attest to this.

But it’s not just social media apps – it’s the phones themselves that keep us hooked. “If it buzzes as soon as you pick it up and it’s in your hand, you get this visceral feeling – that’s again a behavioural science trick,” Rosen told World Finance. Experts argue that these tricks are not just causing obsessive behaviour – they are also causing psychological disorders. Rosen refers to these as ‘iDisorders’: “It’s when the use of technology promotes signs [or] symptoms of psychiatric disorders. So for example, reading on Facebook that all your friends are having a wonderful time and having events that you’re not invited to and showing signs and symptoms of depression, that would be an iDisorder.”

Finding out why
In terms of the ‘time well spent’ initiatives, the question is whether they will actually work to reduce obsessive behaviour and the potential onslaught of iDisorders. The short answer, it would seem, is no. Rosen has been carrying out his own such research for some time now and said: “The results are pretty staggering… The latest results [show] that young adults are checking their [phones] 73 times a day, and they’re there for around 260 minutes, which is almost four and a half hours. It’s a large commitment.”

After a study finishes, Rosen and his team ask participants if they checked the data before submitting their results. The answer is invariably yes. They then ask if it was more or less time than they thought – it’s almost always more. “And then the important question is, did you do anything to make any changes? And the answer [for] at least half of them is no,” said Rosen.

He goes on to say that digital wellbeing apps are missing two key components: “They’re missing the why and the how… Telling you how much time you’re spending, telling you the ‘what’, is important – it’s a first step. But we know from our work that it’s very likely that you won’t do anything, and the reason you won’t do anything is because of the ‘why’. And that’s what we’ve been studying – why are people obsessed with their phones?”

Rosen explained some of the reasons: “One is simply accessibility – you carry [your phone] with you all the time.” Another, he said, is poor metacognition, which sees us make bad decisions about using our phones to our detriment: for example, keeping them within hand’s reach at night, despite knowing it will impact sleep. There is also the boredom factor: people simply do not allow themselves to feel bored anymore. A moment becomes free and out comes our phone, ready to benignly entertain us for seconds at a time. Then is what Rosen believes to be the most important reason: anxiety.

“We study a particular kind of anxiety – we call it technological dependency, or technological anxiety,” he told World Finance. “Some people call it nomophobia, some people call it ‘FOMO’ – fear of missing out. But it’s an anxiety that comes from that social responsibility… to keep checking in on your social media. You may get a notification that forces you to go there, or half the time you don’t get a notification, your brain is just telling you, ‘it’s been a while, I better check it’, and that’s a function of anxiety. And we know that because if you take away your phone, you get highly anxious.”

Studies have been carried out to prove this. In a recent instalment of CBS’ 60 Minutes, which has been watched by millions, Rosen and his colleagues put the test to presenter Anderson Cooper. While hooked up to a device, Cooper’s phone was placed out of sight, but still pinging with notifications. “Every time we texted him, the galvanic skin response, which is a measure of anxiety, spiked,” said Rosen. This type of reaction – though extreme – has in fact become the norm for most of us.

Business model discrepancy
Now that people are starting to comprehend just how obsessed with our phones we have become, the discourse around digital wellbeing is beginning to proliferate. But how can companies whose very purpose – and whose profit margins – depends upon keeping users glued to their screens for as long as possible begin to encourage the very opposite? Part of the answer comes down to a difference in their business models. “If you think about companies that have hardware, like Apple and Google, they have their own operating systems companies,” said Stark. “[This is different to] companies like Facebook, which [are] actually a little bit more vulnerable to some of these conversations to do with digital wellbeing because they’re just one app.”

This means that Apple and Google can promote digital wellbeing, but they can do so by pointing towards social media apps. “I think it’s actually not surprising that you see Google especially being much more willing to engage with digital wellbeing as this kind of loss leader, because they know people are still going to use their search and they’re still going to buy their phones. Whereas Facebook’s phrasing of digital wellbeing, which is this idea of positive connection, supports Facebook’s business model of more connectivity,” Stark told World Finance.

And this is the interesting point: the more a company seems to be doing with regards to digital wellbeing, the less reliant their business model is on the so-called attention economy. Stark believes it comes down to their plans for long-term sustainability: “In order to have their consumers continue to use these devices, and crucially to provide data over the long term, these companies need you to keep using their products.” If users become so disenchanted with Facebook that they simply stop using it, the company’s entire model would soon collapse. Stark continued: “[Similarly to how], in the retail world, you [offer] something at a lower price than you should to draw people into the store, I think these [wellbeing] technologies are a kind of enticement to keep consumers using their technologies in the long run.”

Ultimately, technology companies are not suddenly worried about our wellbeing. They are not concerned if we’re spending five hours a day on our phones – in fact, that’s a win. They engineered this scenario through their surreptitious use of behavioural psychology. However, they now recognise that people are becoming more aware of their obsessive behaviour, the harm it is causing them in the present, and the potential consequences to their (and their children’s) physical and mental health in the future. As this awareness grows, so will the backlash. In this respect, technology companies are simply trading their short-term growth for long-term profitability: they are just trying to put out the fire before it spreads.