Abstract

Research indicates that mobile phone dependency (MPD) is associated with various behavioral and internalizing problems. While a significant amount of findings points to its negative outcomes, there is a dearth of evidence concerning the determinants of MPD. This study focuses on this critical, yet understudied, subject by analyzing the associations between abusive parenting style, neighborhood characteristics, and MPD among youths in South Korea, a country with one of the highest mobile broadband penetration rates in the world. Based on the secondary analysis of two waves of Korean Children and Youth Panel Survey (KCYPS), a government-funded multiyear study, we investigate individual- and contextual-level factors underlying MPD. Findings show that, net of a host of time-lagged controls (including baseline dependency from the previous year), abusive parenting style significantly increases adolescent MPD. After adjusting for individual level characteristics, however, no contextual-level effect is found, i.e., residing in a neighborhood with a relatively higher proportion of parental abuse is not related to greater MPD. Finally, two cross-level interaction effects are observed. First, the association between parental abuse and MPD is weaker in a neighborhood context with better educated inhabitants (more college graduates). Second, it is reinforced in demographically “aged” communities with more elderly residents.

Highlights

  • A World Bank report indicates that smartphone ownership has spread rapidly throughout the globe, with the latest average cellular subscription rate at 96.8 per 100 individuals [1]

  • Data are drawn from the Korean Children and Youth Panel Survey (KCYPS), a series of longitudinal data collection efforts funded by the Korean government (Ministry of Gender Equality and Family) and carried out by the National Youth Policy Institute (NYPI), the largest public think tank of its kind in the country

  • The intraclass correlation (ICC) shows that slightly over four percent of the variance in mobile phone dependency (MPD) among Korean youths is due to contextual-level effects

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Summary

Introduction

A World Bank report indicates that smartphone ownership has spread rapidly throughout the globe, with the latest average cellular subscription rate at 96.8 per 100 individuals [1]. Even among emerging and developing nations, the median ownership has risen at an extraordinary pace from 21% in 2013 to 37% just two years later [2]. Parental abuse and adolescent MPD in Korea

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