New Delhi: The fact that technology provides us a wealth of opportunities is undeniably true – from making our life easier to helping us live smarter and more efficiently. However, the constant use of technology can also have a large impact on our mental and physical health.


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Likewise, smartphones, despite its high-tech functions and its advantages, can cause negative impacts on social relationships, education, health and other part of our life, and this has been supported by a number of research studies.


In a latest study, researchers say that three of four young adults are likely to exhibit symptoms such as fidgeting and scratching of stress similar to those seen in people with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), upon being separated from their smartphones.


 


The findings showed that young adults tend to get as stressed on losing their phone as they get separating from parents, suggesting the growth of a 'nascent digital culture' where youngsters are becoming more dependent than ever on their phones.


"We are in the middle of a nascent digital culture, with children being born into the world of smart devices. The results support that humans form attachment toward their mobile: they seek the proximity of the mobile and show stress response upon separation," researchers from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences and Eotvos Lorand University in Hungary, were quoted as telling dailmail.co.uk.


For the study, the team conducted experiments on 87 smartphone owners aged between 18 and 26 in Budapest.


Each participant was kept in a room attached to heart monitors. They were given a laptop and a simple computerised maths test to complete, with assistance from the calculator on their phone.


Half of them were told to switch off their mobiles but keep them close, the rest had them removed and placed in a cupboard, while some were given different smartphones.


The analysis showed that those separated from their phones were more likely to display heartbeat patterns often associated with PTSD.


One in three of those left without a mobile exhibited displacement behaviour, such as fidgeting and scratching, which are telltale signs of stress and 20 per cent were drawn towards the cupboard.


Interestingly, the presence of an unfamiliar mobile decreased the effects of separation from their own mobile, similarly to the calming effect of a stranger on children who are separated from the caregiver, the researchers said.


The new study appears in the journal Computers And Human Behaviour.


(With IANS inputs)