Abstract

The goal of the present study was to test two models of phone messaging behaviors among college students—a sociocognitive connection model and a cybernetic personality system model—across three contexts, where messaging behaviors represented disengagement from the primary context: a meal time with friends, attending class, and driving. Using a sample of university students (N = 634), path analyses with boot-strapping procedures were used to model direct and indirect effects of behavioral, social cognition, and personality trait predictors of primary context disengagement via message checking, message reading, and message sending behaviors. Internal and comparative model fit information showed the cybernetic personality system model represented the data well across all three contexts. Across the contexts, phone related habits and normative beliefs about phone usage mediated relations between personality traits and messaging behaviors. In addition, stronger normative beliefs for messaging behaviors and stronger phone related habits predicted unimpeded physical phone access across the contexts. Across contexts, more frequent messaging behaviors were most strongly predicted by the variance shared by low trait self-discipline, high trait anxiety, and high trait altruism via phone-related habits. The results are discussed in terms of the predictive utility of testing process models of messaging behaviors across varying contexts, as well as possible forms of intervention for reducing primary context disengagement via messaging behaviors.

Highlights

  • Recent polls show 98% of young adults aged 18–29 own a mobile phone and 97% use mobile phones for text messaging (Duggan, 2013)

  • The pattern of findings in the present study suggests that across the three contexts of eating with others, being in class, and driving, beliefs about phone usage, habits, and physical phone location are robust predictors of messaging behaviors

  • Personality traits that reflect stability were associated with reductions in phone related habits, and beliefs about normative phone use were important predictors of messaging behaviors across contexts

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Summary

Introduction

Recent polls show 98% of young adults aged 18–29 own a mobile phone and 97% use mobile phones for text messaging (Duggan, 2013). While there are obvious benefits of mobile, handheld communication, mobile phone messaging behaviors may result in distracted or unsafe experiences across consequential contexts for young adults, including social interactions, educational settings, Distracted Messaging, Context, and Personality and operating automobiles (McEvoy et al, 2005; Drews et al, 2009; Wei et al, 2012; Przybylski and Weinstein, 2013; David et al, 2014; Misra et al, 2014). We review research on phone messaging behaviors and describe the components and organization of the sociocognitive connection and the cybernetic personality system models of primary context and task disengagement via messaging behaviors

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