4.5 Article

Good News! Communication Findings May be Underestimated: Comparing Effect Sizes with Self-Reported and Logged Smartphone Use Data

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTER-MEDIATED COMMUNICATION
Volume 25, Issue 5, Pages 346-363

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/jcmc/zmaa009

Keywords

Self-Reports; Logged Data; Smartphone Use; Social Capital; Well-being; Problematic Use of Smartphones; Screen Time

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Despite long-standing concerns over self-reported measures of media use, media research has relied heavily on self-reported data. This study not only examined discrepancies between survey and logged smartphone data but assessed whether correlational outcomes using self-reported measures produce greater or smaller effect sizes compared to outcomes using logged measures. College students (n=294) and MTurk workers (n=291) provided self-reported and logged data of smartphone use over seven days. The correlations we examined involved four psychosocial contexts, including bridging, bonding, well-being, and problematic use of smartphones. The results showed that the effect sizes of correlations using self-reported data tend to be smaller compared to those using logged data. We believe that this is a hopeful message to the field. This could mean that extant survey results have not erroneously inflated communication findings and that communication researchers still have a lot to reveal with further refined measures.

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