Articles features
Youngsters tempted to text even during sex
New York, April 2
Are you obsessed with
texting in the shower, during sex, while using the toilet and even at
funerals? Try not to give in to the temptation to check texts and send
messages back and pay attention to the present situation.
According
to psychologists from the Pennsylvania State University, young students
may realise that texting in the shower or at a funeral is inappropriate
but many do it anyway.
"The buzzes and flashing lights of
smartphones may signal opportunities or threats that cause people to pay
less attention to their present environment and consider the future,"
explained Marissa Harrison, associate professor of psychology in a paper
that appeared in Social Science Journal.
The researchers suggest
that college students are not necessarily trying to create new norms in
texting behaviours but that breaking with these norms is just too
tempting for them in most cases.
The researchers asked 152
college students to fill out a 70-question survey on their attitudes
toward texting in various situations and their general texting habits.
In a survey, college students admitted to texting during funerals, in the shower, during sex and while using the toilet.
While
most participants said they considered texting while taking a shower to
be socially unacceptable, more than 34 percent said they did it anyway.
Most
agreed that texting during a religious service or while reciting the
Pledge of Allegiance was wrong, but more than 22 percent texted during
services and about 11 percent said they texted during the pledge.
Approximately 7.4 percent texted while having sex, even though most admitted that it was wrong.
Some behaviour - such as texting in the bathroom or while eating - are becoming more acceptable for college students.
"Whereas
some people may deem this odd, most college students agree that eating
and toilet texts are the new normal," the researchers said.
Trained
as an evolutionary psychologist, Harrison suggests that the forces of
natural selection may play a part in creating this behaviour.
"We
are all programmed to notice movement and change, so maybe those buzzes
and bells of texting, just like certain sounds that are used to
indicate the charging of a predator, for example, reinforce the need to
find out what is going on," Harrison pointed out.