十分之四的美国青少年承认他们的智能手机使用存在问题
4 In 10 US Teens Admit Problems With Their Smartphone Usage

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/4-10-us-teens-admit-problems-their-smartphone-usage

13-17 岁的美国青少年普遍认为他们正确使用手机和社交媒体,但近一半 (44%) 承认在手机上花费了太多时间,超过三分之一 (38%) 报告过度使用社交媒体。 尽管承认这些问题,但很少有青少年减少设备的使用。 男孩和女孩对手机成瘾表现出不同程度的担忧,33% 的男孩和 44% 的女孩表示高度使用智能手机。 与男性(32%)相比,更多女性青少年(41%)表示减少了看屏幕的时间。 TikTok 和 YouTube 等视频应用在年轻人中很受欢迎,分别有 71% 和 58% 的人每天使用。 相比之下,只有 19% 的青少年每天访问 Facebook。 包括加利福尼亚州在内的美国多个州已经颁布了针对未成年人的屏幕时间限制,要求学校在 2026 年之前采取反智能手机政策。佛罗里达州、路易斯安那州和南卡罗来纳州等其他州已经禁止在上课时间使用手机,而其他州也已发布政策 指导方针。 尽管人们仍然担心过度使用屏幕对年轻人的负面影响,但许多青少年对智能手机持积极态度,70% 的人认为,在他们的人群中,智能手机的优点多于缺点。

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原文

recent Pew Research Center survey shows that most U.S. teens between 13 and 17 think they spend just the right amount or too little time on their smartphones and social media.

Conversely, as Statista's Florian Zandt details below, 38 percent of all teenagers say they spend too much time on their smartphones and 27 percent claim that social media takes up too much of their time. However, the study also shows that even though this awareness exists, only a minority of respondents have cut back on using said devices and services.

The survey conducted in the fall of 2023 among 1,453 parent-teen-dyads or pairs also highlights significant differences in usage awareness between teenage boys and girls. A third of all surveyed boys and 44 percent of all surveyed girls said their smartphone use is too intense. Girls are also more likely to cut down on their screen time, with 41 percent saying they use their smartphone less, contrasted with 32 percent of all male teens participating in the survey.

Infographic: 4 in 10 U.S. Teens See Problems With Their Smartphone Usage | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

An analysis of the services young U.S. residents use regularly shows a clear preference for video-focused platforms like TikTok and YouTube. 17 percent of all respondents said they almost constantly use the former, while the share claiming the same about Alphabet's video service stood at 16 percent. Overall, YouTube and TikTok were used at least once per day by 71 percent and 58 percent of survey participants, respectively. Facebook, a social network mostly mentioned in conjunction with older generations nowadays, was used at least once a day by 19 percent of teen respondents. Compared to a similar survey from 2014, the share of teens saying they're online almost constantly has roughly doubled.

With this development in mind, tackling the issue of prolonged screen time has recently transcended the boundaries of parental guidance and control and has become an issue for state legislators. As ABC News reports, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law a new directive requiring schools to implement measures to ban or limit smartphone usage in schools by July 1, 2026. According to a statement by Newsom quoted by ABC, "this new law will help students focus on academics, social development, and the world in front of them, not their screens, when they’re in school."

summary by Education Week shows that Florida, Louisiana and South Carolina have wholesale bans of smartphone usage during school time in place, while five other states require the implementation of specific policies by their school districts and four additional states have issued policy recommendations. Most of these laws and recommendations were signed or issued in 2024 in what is likely a reaction to increased pressure on social media platforms to safeguard younger users from harm. For example, in June 2024, the U.S. Surgeon General suggested that said platforms should implement warning labels. However, it's unlikely that U.S. teens will heed such warnings due to only a minority claiming that they indeed spend too much time on their phones and 70 percent of respondents to the cited Pew Research Center survey said using smartphones in their age bracket has more benefits than it does harm.

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