Tuning into the real effect of smartphone use on parenting: a multiverse analysis.

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Modecki, Kathryn L
Low-Choy, Samantha
Uink, Bep N
Vernon, Lynette
Correia, Helen
Andrews, Kylie
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2020
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Concerns have been raised regarding the potential negative impacts of parents' smartphone use on the parent-child relationship. A scoping literature review indicated inconsistent effects, arguably attributable to different conceptualizations of parent phone use and conflation of phone use with technological interference. METHODS: Based on a sample of n = 3, 659 parents collected in partnership with a national public broadcaster, we conducted a multiverse analysis. We explored 84 different analytic choices to address whether associations were weak versus robust, and provide clearer direction for measurement, theory, and practice. Effects were assessed in relation to p values, effect sizes, and AIC; we further conducted a meta-analytic sensitivity check. RESULTS: Direct associations between smartphone use and parenting were relatively weak and mixed. Instead, the relation between use and parenting depended on level of technological interference. This pattern was particularly robust for family displacement. At low levels of displacing time with family using technology, more smartphone use was associated with better (not worse) parenting. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate fragility in findings of risks for parental smartphone use on parenting; there were few concerns in this regard. Rather, at low levels of technological interference, more phone use was associated with higher parenting quality. Scholars should avoid generalized narratives of family risk and seek to uncover real effects of smartphone use on family outcomes across diverse households and contexts.

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Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry

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© 2020 The Authors. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Association for Child and Adolescent Mental Health. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.

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This publication has been entered in Griffith Research Online as an Advance Online Version.

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Clinical sciences

Psychology

Cognitive and computational psychology

Applied and developmental psychology

Clinical and health psychology

Smartphone

multiverse

parent-child relationship

parenting

technoference

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Modecki, KL; Low-Choy, S; Uink, BN; Vernon, L; Correia, H; Andrews, K, Tuning into the real effect of smartphone use on parenting: a multiverse analysis., J Child Psychol Psychiatry, 2020

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