Summary: A new research reveals that placing your cellphone out of reach doesn’t drastically lower distraction or increase productivity. While individuals used their phones less when they were further away, they just shifted their attention to other gadgets like tablets. The primary concern isn’t the phone itself but the deeply rooted patterns and routines we’ve built around it.
Phones remain the favored tool for diversion due to their multifunctionality, portability, and sensory design. Yet with limited mobility, people gravitate toward products that offer entertainment and network. The study highlights the need to move beyond blaming tools and instead focus on customer behavior and game design.
Important Information:
- No Just Proximity: Moving the telephone aside reduced consumption but didn’t reduce distraction.
- Habits Drive Distraction: Citizens shifted to devices instead of refocusing on labor.
- Phone Preference: Phones are still the best decision for diversion due to convenience and versatility.
Origin: Borders
If you just throw away your phone to read this, chances are you’re never alone.
Our devices are an infinite supply of diversion, and we communicate with them every four to six hours. This is often driven by behavior as well as alerts, leading to a disrupted movement of engagement while we’re trying to become successful.
A new study published in , Frontiers in Computer Science , investigated if placing phones just out of our approach while we’re at work influenced system use for actions not related to work.  ,
” The study shows that putting the smartphone away may not be sufficient to reduce disruption and procrastination, or increase focus”, said the paper’s author Dr Maxi Heitmayer, a researcher at the London School of Economics. ” The problem is not rooted within the device itself, but in the habits and routines that we have developed with our devices”.
Device vs distance
In the study, 22 participants were asked to work for two days in a private, soundproof room to which they brought the devices they usually have on them for work, a laptop and phone at a minimum. They did not change notification settings, and the notifications they received were in no way controlled by the researcher.
Two settings that only differed by the distance between participant and their phone were explored: in the first, phones were placed on the desk participants were working from, in the second, the phone was placed on a separate desk 1.5 meters away.
Limited smartphone accessibility led to reduced smartphone use, but instead of becoming less distracted, participants shifted their attention to their laptops. Across conditions, participants did not spend different amounts of time on work or leisure activities.
In addition, the results showed that phones were the preferred device for distraction. ” It’s your connection with loved ones and with work. It’s your navigation system, alarm clock, music player, and source of information. Unsurprisingly, people turn to the tool that does everything”, Heitmayer pointed out.
” Even if you have no clear purpose, you know it has your socials and can provide entertainment”. While computers can fulfill the same functions, using one is less haptically pleasant, and they are not as handy and portable.
” In my research I want to shift the discourse beyond device-centric debates”, Heitmayer said. ” The smartphone itself is not the problem. It’s what we do with it and, frankly, the apps that generate and reinforce these habits”.
Made to distract
To optimize time spent without distractions, notifications can be set to arrive at specific times or be silenced altogether. Any way that helps users be more mindful with their time is a step in the right direction, Heitmayer said. Despite these strategies, he cautioned that, realistically, we’re not stopping to pick up our phones anytime soon.
” Whenever there is a small break, people check their phone, regardless of whatever system they have in place. And then there’s the socials, which is an entirely different beast”.
” There is a very unequal battle fought out every single day by each and every one of us when we use our phones”, Heitmayer continued.
” The things inside phones that are the biggest attention sinks are developed by large corporations who greatly profit from our failure to resist the temptation to use them, all of this is literally , by design”.
Heitmayer also said that in the future we should focus on protecting users, particularly young ones.
” These devices are incredibly useful and can facilitate learning and creativity, but they come at a cost that most adults struggle to manage, so we simply cannot ignore this”.
About this psychology and digital distraction research news
Author: Deborah Pirchner
Source: Frontiers
Contact: Deborah Pirchner – Frontiers
Image: The image is credited to Neuroscience News
Original Research: Open access.
” When the Phone’s Away, People Use Their Computer to Play Distance to the Smartphone Reduces Device Usage but not Overall Distraction and Task Fragmentation during Work” by Maxi Heitmayer et al. Frontiers in Computer Science
Abstract
When the Phone’s Away, People Use Their Computer to Play Distance to the Smartphone Reduces Device Usage but not Overall Distraction and Task Fragmentation during Work
The smartphone helps workers balance the demands of their professional and personal lives but can also be a distraction, affecting productivity, wellbeing, and work-life balance.
Drawing from insights on the impact of physical environments on object engagement, this study examines how the distance between the smartphone and the user influences interactions in work contexts.
Participants ( N = 22 ) engaged in two 5h knowledge work sessions on the computer, with the smartphone placed outside their immediate reach during one session.
Results show that limited smartphone accessibility led to reduced smartphone use, but participants shifted non-work activities to the computer and the time they spent on work and leisure activities overall remained unchanged.
These findings suggest that discussions on smartphone disruptiveness in work contexts should consider the specific activities performed, challenging narratives of’ smartphone addiction’ and ‘ smartphone overuse’ as the cause of increased disruptions and lowered work productivity.