What your choice of smartphone says about you

Date: November 21, 2016
Source: Lancaster University


Android users are more honest than iPhone users say psychologists, in a study 
published this week which is the first to find a link between personality and 
smartphone type.

Four out of five UK adults now have a smartphone with the market split 50/50 
between the two rival operating systems.

Smartphones' connection with our personalities is so marked that psychologists 
say smartphones have become an extension of ourselves.

Not only can they be personalised to our preferences, but even the type of 
smartphone reveals clues about who we are.

Researchers gave over 500 smartphone users several questionnaires about 
themselves and their attitudes towards their mobile phone.


A comparison of both Android and iPhone users revealed that iPhone users are 
more likely to be:

Younger
More than twice as likely to be women
More likely to see their phone as a status object
More extraverted
Less concerned about owning devices favoured by most people


In contrast, Android users were more likely to be:

Male
Older
More honest
More agreeable
Less likely to break rules for personal gain
Less interested in wealth and status

Dr David Ellis from Lancaster University said: "In this study, we demonstrate 
for the first time that an individual's choice of smartphone operating system 
can provide useful clues when it comes to predicting their personality and 
other individual characteristics."

In a second study, the psychologists were then able to develop a computer 
programme that could predict what type of smartphone a person owned based on 
differences between iPhone and Android users.

His co-lead Heather Shaw from the University of Lincoln said: "It is becoming 
more and more apparent that smartphones are becoming a mini digital version of 
the user, and many of us don't like it when other people attempt to use our 
phones because it can reveal so much about us."



The research appears in Cyberpsychology, Behaviour and Social Networking.

Journal Reference: Heather Shaw, David A. Ellis, Libby-Rae Kendrick, Fenja 
Ziegler, Richard Wiseman. Predicting Smartphone Operating System from 
Personality and Individual Differences. Cyberpsychology, Behavior, and Social 
Networking, 2016; DOI: 10.1089/cyber.2016.0324

This reference: Lancaster University. "What your choice of smartphone says 
about you." ScienceDaily.
ScienceDaily, 21 November 2016. 
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/11/161121144206.htm>.

==

Cheers,
Stephen

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