Smartphone and Social Media Addiction: Exploring the perceptions and experiences of Canadian teenagers

Abstract
‘Addiction’ to internet-connected technology continues to dominate media discourses of young people. Researchers have identified negative outcomes, including decreased mental health, resulting from anxieties related not to technology per se, but a fear of missing out and social connectivity related to online technologies. Not enough is known, however, regarding young people’s own responses to these ideas. This paper highlights discussions with teenagers around the idea of internet addiction, exploring their experiences and perceptions regarding the idea that ‘kids today’ are addicted to their devices, especially smartphones and the social network sites they often access from them. 35 focus group discussions with 115 Canadian teenagers (aged 13-19 years old) center on their use of information communication technologies, especially contemporary social network sites such as Snapchat, Instagram and Facebook. Our discussions reveal 1) that teens are actively embracing the label of addiction; 2) their ironic positioning occurs despite a felt sense of debased agency in relation to the power of the algorithms and affordances of the technologies mediating their use; and 3) rather than a stark divide between adults as ‘digital immigrants’ vs. young people as ‘digital natives’, our teens positioned themselves in contrast to both their parents and younger siblings, both of whom are criticized as addicted themselves. A consistent theme is the influence of peer groups who socially compel addictive behaviours, including the fear of missing out, rather than the technologies per se. Wider implications for thinking beyond solely young people as suffering from online addiction are considered.
Description
Keywords
internet addiction, teenangers, social media, fear of missing out, technological affordances
Citation
Adorjan, M., & Ricciardelli, R. (2021). Smartphone and social media addiction: Exploring the perceptions and experiences of Canadian teenagers. The Canadian Review of Sociology, 58(1), 45–64. https://doi.org/10.1111/cars.12319