Submitted: February 5, 2012 - 11:48am
Originally published: February 5, 2012
Last updated: February 5, 2012 - 11:55am
Originally published: February 5, 2012
Last updated: February 5, 2012 - 11:55am
Source:
Guardian, The
Author:
James Meikle
Location:
University of Chicago Booth School of Business, 5807 South Woodlawn Avenue, Chicago, IL, 60637, United States
Tweeting or checking emails may be harder to resist than cigarettes and alcohol, according to researchers who tried to measure how well people could resist their desires.
They even claim that while sleep and sex may be stronger urges, people are more likely to give in to longings or cravings to use social and other media. A team headed by Wilhelm Hofmann of Chicago University's Booth Business School say their experiment, using BlackBerrys, to gauge the willpower of 205 people aged between 18 and 85 in and around the German city of Würtzburg is the first to monitor such responses "in the wild" outside a laboratory. The results will soon be published in the journal Psychological Science.
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