Volume 7, Issue 8 e2271
ORIGINAL RESEARCH
Open Access

Sports and exercise-related smartphone use is antagonistic to hedonic use in regular exercisers: A cross-sectional study examining the roles of exercise frequency and duration

Neha Pirwani

Neha Pirwani

Doctoral School of Education, Faculty of Education and Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary

Institute of Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, Faculty of Education and Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary

Contribution: Conceptualization, ​Investigation, Visualization, Software, Data curation, Writing - review & editing

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Attila Szabo

Corresponding Author

Attila Szabo

Institute of Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, Faculty of Education and Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary

Correspondence Attila Szabo, Institute of Health Promotion and Sport Sciences, Faculty of Education and Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, 1117 Budapest, Bogdánfy St. 10, Hungary.

Email: [email protected]

Contribution: Supervision, Formal analysis, Conceptualization, Visualization, Validation, Methodology, Writing - review & editing, Writing - original draft

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First published: 29 July 2024
Citations: 1

Abstract

Background

Hedonic smartphone use has been associated with dependence and addiction studied under the umbrella term Problematic Smartphone Use (PSU). Research usually explores total screen time as an index of PSU. A few studies suggest that exercise is inversely related to smartphone use time. However, it is unknown which primary characteristics of exercise behavior are related to more moderate smarthone use. Furthermore, the purpose of smartphone use, such as hedonic use associated with PSU versus utilitarian use, was not tested in the sports and exercise contexts. Hedonic use generally means playing with the smartphone for joy, distraction, and satisfaction. Utilitarian use implies practical and valuable use. There is a conjecture that sports involvement may foster utilitarian use through increased involvement in sports-related information-seeking, goal-setting, and self-monitoring.

Methods

Therefore, we examined whether weekly exercise frequency, workout duration, and perceived exercise intensity relate to total daily smarthone and hedonic use and whether this relationship is mediated by sports-related utilitarian device use. We tested regularly exercising adults (n = 360, 132 males, Mage = 39.0 ± 9.8, Mweekly exercise = 5.8 ± 1.9) who volunteered for this study and provided demographic information about their exercise habits and smartphone use.

Results

The results revealed that all exercise parameters mediated the total daily smartphone use, with perceived exercise intensity being a negative predictor. Further, exercise frequency and duration (but not intensity) positively predicted sports-related smartphone use, which inversely predicted hedonic use.

Conclusion

These results suggest that exercise parameters directly relate to daily smartphone use, which completely mediates hedonic use. These findings may partially account for the frequently reported inverse relationship between regular exercise and PSU by suggesting that the connection is mediated via sports-related smartphone use.

Key points

  • Exercise frequency and duration are positive predictors of daily smartphone use.

  • Exercise intensity is a negative predictor of total daily smartphone use.

  • Exercise frequency and duration are positively related to sports-related smartphone use.

  • Sports-related smartphone use is a negative predictor of hedonic smartphone use.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST STATEMENT

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT

The data that support the findings of this study are openly available in Mendeley at https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/crhtw2dwy3/1, reference number crhtw2dwy3/1.

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