Why your phone habits leave you feeling so bad

For those who’ve been in the situation where we unlock our phone and start futzing around on our home screen, only to find ourselves looking up at the clock an hour later with a sense of shame and regret, fear not: science has your back, according to research published and presented at the human-computer interaction conference CHI.

Researchers at the University of Washington, Columbia University, and National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University in Taiwan followed 17 U.S. Android users for seven days. They captured a screenshot every five seconds, then paired those 34,000-plus images with real-time intention surveys, daily regret ratings, and follow-up interviews. An AI model automatically labeled each screenshot and categorized them into seven activity types, including direct messaging, search, or browsing an algorithmic feed.

This data allowed researchers to map user reactions and their levels of regret for each type of phone activity.

“There are all of these products that people say they value and choose to use every day, and yet they also talk about how frustrated they feel by some of their own usage habits,” says Alexis Hiniker, an academic at the University of Washington and one of the coauthors of the paper. “They’ll talk about deleting things or trying to quit—we were trying to dig into what’s going on there.”

The findings suggested we’re a pretty regretful bunch. Inside social apps, viewing algorithm-recommended posts and reading comment threads topped the regret rankings, even beating subscription-feed browsing. In contrast, direct communication and active search were the activities users regretted the least.

Time played a role too. Longer sessions, and those that drifted from initial intentions (often from “send a message” to “just scrolling”), pushed regret scores higher, though still lower than sessions that began as pure browsing.

“Habit-driven social media checking was pretty regrettable for a lot of people,” says Hiniker. “They didn’t necessarily mind if they were using social media to do something totally unproductive, just to help them relax or just enjoy themselves. But they felt a lot better when that was an intentional choice and they chose to go there for some entertainment, as opposed to not really thinking about what they’re doing and just picking up their phone out of habit.”

The findings reflect poorly on big tech companies, which have made fortunes by shifting people from purposeful engagement with one another to mindless scrolling, pushing users toward algorithmically dictated feeds—the type most disliked by users.

But Hiniker believes there’s hope for platforms that take a different path. “We desperately need social platforms that really are trying to support people in engaging with others, rather than extracting as much of their attention as possible and directing them to this recommended and sponsored content that they never chose to follow,” she says.

https://www.fastcompany.com/91348032/why-your-phone-habits-leave-you-feeling-so-bad?partner=rss&utm_source=rss&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss+fastcompany&utm_content=rss

Établi 2mo | 9 juin 2025, 18:10:08


Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire

Autres messages de ce groupe

Crowdfunded companies are ‘ghosting’ investors. Changing the rules could restore trust

Imagine you invest $500 to help a startup get off the ground through investment crowdfunding. The pitch is slick, the platform feels

18 août 2025, 09:30:05 | Fast company - tech
AI gives students more reasons to not read books. It’s hurting their literacy

A perfect storm is brewing for reading.

AI arrived as both

17 août 2025, 10:20:08 | Fast company - tech
Older Americans like using AI, but trust issues remain, survey shows

Artificial intelligence is a lively topic of conversation in schools and workplaces, which could lead you to believe that only younger people use it. However, older Americans are also using

17 août 2025, 10:20:06 | Fast company - tech
From ‘AI washing’ to ‘sloppers,’ 5 AI slang terms you need to know

While Sam Altman, Elon Musk, and other AI industry leaders can’t stop

16 août 2025, 11:10:08 | Fast company - tech
AI-generated errors set back this murder case in an Australian Supreme Court

A senior lawyer in Australia has apologized to a judge for

15 août 2025, 16:40:03 | Fast company - tech
This $200 million sports streamer is ready to take on ESPN and Fox

Recent Nielsen data confirmed what many of us had already begun to sense: Streaming services

15 août 2025, 11:50:09 | Fast company - tech
This new flight deck technology is making flying safer, reducing delays, and curbing emissions

Ever wondered what goes on behind the scenes in a modern airliner’s cockpit? While you’re enjoying your in-flight movie, a quiet technological revolution is underway, one that’s

15 août 2025, 11:50:07 | Fast company - tech