Study finds phone notifications disrupt attention for 7 seconds

Smartphone notifications interrupt users' concentration for about seven seconds, according to new research from the University of Lausanne. The effect is stronger for personally relevant alerts, with frequent checks amplifying the distraction. Researchers warn that these brief interruptions accumulate over hundreds of daily pings.

Researchers at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland conducted an experiment with 180 university students using a Stroop task, a test measuring information processing and focus. Colored words appeared on screens, requiring participants to identify font colors while ignoring the words' meanings. During the task, notifications popped up, mimicking real phone alerts in varying degrees of realism across three groups: one believing they were receiving genuine personal notifications, another seeing fake social media pop-ups, and a third viewing blurry, illegible ones. All groups experienced a roughly seven-second delay in processing speed, with the most pronounced slowdown for those anticipating real messages from their phones. Hippolyte Fournier, a postdoctoral fellow and lead author, explained that interruptions stem from perceptual prominence, repeated conditioning, and social importance of notifications. He added that notification volume and checking frequency correlate with greater disruption, suggesting fragmented smartphone use harms attention more than total screen time. Participants averaged 100 notifications daily, turning minor delays into significant cognitive costs during tasks like driving or studying. Co-author Fabian Ringeval noted in a LinkedIn post that frequent interactions heighten vulnerability to interruptions. Psychiatry professor Anna Lembke of Stanford observed that engagement levels, such as quick responses to alerts, predict problematic use better than hours spent on devices. In the US, 90% of people own smartphones and average over five hours daily usage, per Pew Research and Harmony Healthcare IT. The findings, set for the June issue of Computers in Human Behavior, urge reducing unnecessary notifications to boost digital well-being.

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Illustration of a man using a smartphone on the toilet, highlighting a study's link to increased hemorrhoid odds.
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Study finds smartphone use on the toilet is associated with higher odds of hemorrhoids

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A small study of adults undergoing screening colonoscopy found that people who reported using smartphones while sitting on the toilet were more likely to have hemorrhoids detected during the procedure. The research, published in PLOS One, also found phone users spent longer on the toilet than non-users, though the authors cautioned the results show an association rather than proof that phones cause the condition.

Brendan Clarey, deputy editor of Michigan Enjoyer, describes how replacing his iPhone with a Light Phone helped restore his attention span and creativity. He also eliminated his TV and limited computer use after work hours. The changes allowed him to read more, write creatively, and connect with others without digital distractions.

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YouTube has begun muting push notifications on mobile devices from subscribed channels that users have not engaged with for at least a month. The change applies to channels with notifications set to 'all' and aims to reduce clutter while keeping alerts available in the app. Infrequent uploaders remain unaffected.

The Telecommunications Regulatory Commission announced that during the February 18 regional drill in Mexico City and the State of Mexico, Apple devices will display the “Presidential Alert” message. Changes to update this label and reduce the alert volume will be implemented by April. President Claudia Sheinbaum announced these adjustments in response to citizen comments on the sound's intensity.

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A recent study by a University of Tsukuba research group estimates that Japan incurs an annual economic loss of around ¥1 trillion due to 'social jet lag,' the mismatch between weekday and holiday sleep patterns. The analysis drew from data of about 80,000 workers using a smartphone sleep app. It marks the first large-scale examination of the link between sleep patterns and labor productivity.

A biennial survey shows that about one in three Hong Kong adults have moderate to severe depression symptoms, nearly triple the rate from 2012, with Generation Z respondents spending much time on screens most affected. The study also found that 22 percent of respondents turned to AI chatbots for stress management, which experts on Thursday called “risky” as it could delay professional help. The depression index stood at 7.27, the highest since 2012.

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