Verily magazine's Mary Rose Somarriba wrote a few months back about
how phubbing actually has neurological consequences, especially in developing emotional bonds.
Not exact matches
The research out of Baylor University's business school surveyed nearly 500 adults about
how a phenomenon the researchers dub «
phubbing» — i.e. snubbing someone for your phone — impacts relationships.
But once I learned about the trend «
phubbing» — snubbing your partner in favor of looking at your phone — and
how it can negatively affect relationships, I decided that I needed to at least try and make a change.
Set aside distractions, like the cell phone; beware of
how much «
phubbing,» or phone - snubbing has negatively affected our social relationships and try to focus on your child when you speak to him instead of being distracted and checking email or messages.
James A. Roberts, Ph.D., professor of marketing, and Meredith David, Ph.D., assistant professor of marketing, published their latest study — «Put Down Your Phone and Listen to Me:
How Boss
Phubbing Undermines the Psychological Conditions Necessary for Employee Engagement» — in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.
A 2016 article published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior looked at «partner
phubbing» — when your partner snubs you in favor of their phone — to examine
how this behavior was affecting relationships and personal well - being.