HCCYOct 18, 2015

Three Hours a Day: Understanding Current Teen Practices of Smartphone Application Use

arXiv:1510.05192v120 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses the need for updated insights into teen smartphone practices to inform the design of mobile apps, particularly for communication and privacy, though it is incremental as it updates prior studies with new data.

The study investigated current smartphone app usage patterns among teens, finding they average nearly 3 hours per day, with two-thirds of app use involving about 10 distinct communication applications.

Teens are using mobile devices for an increasing number of activities. Smartphones and a variety of mobile apps for communication, entertainment, and productivity have become an integral part of their lives. This mobile phone use has evolved rapidly as technology has changed and thus studies from even 2 or 3 years ago may not reflect new patterns and practices as smartphones have become more sophisticated. In order to understand current teen's practices around smartphone use, we conducted a two week, mixed-methods study with 14 diverse teens. Through voicemail diaries, interviews, and real world usage data from a logging application installed on their smartphones, we developed an understanding of the types of apps used by teens, when they use these apps, and their reasons for using specific apps in particular situations. We found that the teens in our study used their smartphones for an average of almost 3 hours per day and that two-thirds of all app use involved interacting with an average of almost 10 distinct communications applications. From our study data, we highlight key implications for the design of future mobile apps or services, specifically new social and communications-related applications that allow teens to maintain desired levels of privacy and permanence on the content that they share.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

Your Notes