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Women prefer smartphones over their spouses, says study
Such is the dependence on a smartphone now that a fifth of the respondents in a survey said they would find it more difficult to be without a phone for a week than their partner.
London: If your wife is spending less and less time with you and the warmth that you shared with her has cooled off, you have a new object to blame -- her smartphone, suggests new research.
Such is the dependence on a smartphone now that a fifth of the respondents in a survey said they would find it more difficult to be without a phone for a week than their partner.
Keeping tabs on the social media, checking emails and sending texts mean women on an average spend 12 hours more a week on their mobiles than with a loved one, showed the Britain-based survey conducted by Bausch & Lomb Ultra contact lenses.
The study also showed that those who have become dependent on the phones may experience stress, anger and panic if they cannot access their phones when they want.
"All of this interaction and addiction with our digital devices creates problems for our eyes," psychologist Chireal Shallow told The Sun.
"More than half say their eyes feel tired at the end of the day," Shallow said.
A study published earlier in the journal Computers in Human Behaviour also found that using a cellphone can ruin romantic relationships and increase levels of depression.
"Something as common as cellphone use can undermine the bedrock of our happiness -- our relationships with our romantic partners," one of the researchers James Roberts, Professor at Baylor University in Texas, in the US, said.