World Languages, asked by rinkurava01, 9 months ago

misuse of the smartphone,social media,and internet​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

HERE IS UR ANSWER

Explanation:

A cyberbully is someone who abuses another person through the internet or other technology. Social networking sites are often breeding grounds for such abuse. ... That means that students can do damage by acting like someone else while chatting or changing that person's profiile.

HOPE IT IS HELPFUL FOR YOU

HOPE IT IS HELPFUL FOLLOW ME AND MARK AS BRILLIANT

Answered by laabhansh9545jaiswal
1

Answer:

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Explanation:

People’s love of social media, emails and texts has created a new category of tech users: "constant checkers," who relentlessly scan their smartphones, computers and tablets for the next wave of messages. And it is fueling some people’s anxiety. According to APA’s 2017 Stress in America survey, 43 percent of Americans qualify as constant checkers and almost a fifth of Americans report that technology use is a very or somewhat significant source of stress for them.

People’s love of social media, emails and texts has created a new category of tech users: "constant checkers," who relentlessly scan their smartphones, computers and tablets for the next wave of messages. And it is fueling some people’s anxiety. According to APA’s 2017 Stress in America survey, 43 percent of Americans qualify as constant checkers and almost a fifth of Americans report that technology use is a very or somewhat significant source of stress for them.Increased stress is just one of the negative side effects that can come with too much technology use. Problematic smartphone use—addiction-like behavior in which excessive smartphone use results in negative outcomes in daily life—has been linked with depression and anxiety in a review of the literature by University of Toledo psychology professor Jon D. Elhai, PhD, and colleagues (Journal of Affective Disorders, Vol. 207, 2017). "We can’t determine cause and effect, because most of the studies were correlational," says Elhai.

People’s love of social media, emails and texts has created a new category of tech users: "constant checkers," who relentlessly scan their smartphones, computers and tablets for the next wave of messages. And it is fueling some people’s anxiety. According to APA’s 2017 Stress in America survey, 43 percent of Americans qualify as constant checkers and almost a fifth of Americans report that technology use is a very or somewhat significant source of stress for them.Increased stress is just one of the negative side effects that can come with too much technology use. Problematic smartphone use—addiction-like behavior in which excessive smartphone use results in negative outcomes in daily life—has been linked with depression and anxiety in a review of the literature by University of Toledo psychology professor Jon D. Elhai, PhD, and colleagues (Journal of Affective Disorders, Vol. 207, 2017). "We can’t determine cause and effect, because most of the studies were correlational," says Elhai.And while problematic device use in general does not yet qualify as an addiction, there is enough evidence about internet gaming in particular that the World Health Organization (WHO) added gaming disorder to the latest update of its International Classification of Diseases, and the American Psychiatric Association lists it as a condition that warrants further study in the latest version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. In response to these controversial moves, APA’s Div. 46 (Society for Media Psychology and Technology) issued a statement expressing concern over WHO’s decision, noting that the research base is still insufficient; APA’s Div. 50 (Society of Addiction Psychology) created a task force to come up with a response.

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