Updated
Updated · en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br · Jun 5
Experts Warn App Rewards Drive Phone Addiction, Offer 5 Simple Fixes
Updated
Updated · en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br · Jun 5

Experts Warn App Rewards Drive Phone Addiction, Offer 5 Simple Fixes

1 articles · Updated · en.clickpetroleoegas.com.br · Jun 5

Summary

  • Mental health specialists say automatic phone use is rising because apps bombard users with notifications, likes, short videos and unpredictable content that can turn a quick check into nearly an hour of scrolling.
  • Intermittent rewards keep people chasing the next funny or shocking post, while the underlying stress, boredom or anxiety that prompted the check often remains after long browsing sessions.
  • Poor sleep, anxiety and trouble concentrating are among the problems linked to excessive use, prompting experts to push control rather than total abstinence from smartphones.
  • Android Digital Wellbeing and iPhone Screen Time are among the tools experts recommend, alongside disabling nonessential alerts, keeping phones away from the bed, setting screen-free periods and switching displays to grayscale.
  • Simple friction can also help: changing the lock screen to a real-life goal, wrapping the phone with a rubber band, taking short walks without it, or using blockers such as BePresent, ScreenZen and Brick.

Insights

Your phone is measurably changing your brain's structure. Are we facing a hidden crisis of cognitive decline?
Tech's addictive design is now legally recognized. Can personal willpower ever be enough to win the battle for our attention?
If scrolling mimics gambling, should tech companies face the same level of regulation as the casino industry?