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Sleep with your iPhone? You’re not alone

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NEW YORK (AP) — You gave it a pet name. It knows more about you

than your mother does. Sometimes you even sleep with it. In fact,

you’re so attached to it that being separated for only a few

minutes could send you into a panic.

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While smartphone users worry about mobile hacking and other

security threats that are making news these days, psychologists and

others are concerned about another equally troubling issue: the

growing obsession among people who would much rather interact with

their smartphones than with other human beings.

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“Watching people who get their first smartphone, there’s a very

quick progression from having a basic phone you don’t talk about to

people who love their iPhone, name their phone and buy their phones

outfits,” said Lisa Merlo, director of psychotherapy training at

the University of Florida.

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The increasing dependence comes as more Americans ditch their

iPods, cameras, maps and address books in favor of the myriad

capabilities of a smartphone. After all, companies have rolled out

thousands of applications that do everything from track your heart

rate to guide you through the streets of New York City. While

smartphones have made life easier for some, psychologists say the

love of them is becoming more like an addiction, creating

consequences that range from minor (teenagers who communicate in

three-letter acronyms like LOL and BRB) to major (car accidents

caused by people who text while driving).

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Merlo, a clinical psychologist, said she’s observed a number of

behaviors among smartphone users that she labels “problematic.”

Among them, Merlo says some patients pretend to talk on the phone

or fiddle with apps to avoid eye contact or other interactions at a

bar or a party. Others are so genuinely engrossed in their phones

that they ignore the people around them completely.

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“The more bells and whistles the phone has,” she says, “the more

likely they are to get too attached.”

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Michelle Hackman, a recent high school graduate in Long Island, NY,

won a $75,000 prize in this year’s Intel Science Talent Search with

a research project investigating teens’ attachment to their cell

phones. She found that students separated from their phones were

under-stimulated – a low heart rate was an indicator – and lacked

the ability to entertain themselves.

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Most of the teens at Hackman’s affluent high school own

smartphones, she says, and could even be found texting under their

desks during class. “It creates an on-edge feeling and you don’t

realize how much of the lecture you’re missing,” Hackman

says.

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For some, the anxious feeling that they might miss something has

caused them to slumber next to their smartphones. More than a third

of U.S. adults – 35 percent – now own a smartphone, according to

the Pew Research Center, and two-thirds of them sleep with their

phones right next to their beds.

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Michael Breus, a psychologist and sleep specialist, said in his

clinical practice, his patients often describe how they answer

emails, text and surf the Web as they’re trying to wind down at

night. He says this is a bad idea.

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“This behavior can increase cognitive arousal,” he says, “leading

to the No. 1 complaint I hear: `I can’t turn off my mind and fall

asleep’.”

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Trouble sleeping isn’t the only problem smartphones junkies

exhibit. Some people are willing to do almost anything to feed

their addiction — including spending more money for the data plans

than they can afford. According to J.D. Power and Associates, the

average smartphone user spends about $107 each month for wireless

access — more than the average household pays for electricity each

month.

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And consumers’ dependence on mobile phones is only expected to grow

as people use their phones for things like shopping and banking.

Mobile commerce – purchases made when shoppers access stores’

websites or mobile applications through their phones – is expected

to account for $6 billion in sales this year, according to

Forrester Research.

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For instance, Kristyn Wilson, a marketing professional in Columbus,

Ohio, uses her phone to locate stores and compare prices, in

addition to ordinary tasks like checking email and sending texts.

She also uses it to buy entertainment vouchers through daily deal

site Groupon and even to pay for her coffee at Starbucks, where she

simply has to wave the phone in front of a scanner. As a result,

she rarely separates from the device.

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“My phone is in my hand all the time,” says Wilson, who stops short

of sleeping next to her phone. “You have to draw the line

somewhere.”

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For others, being away from their phone will almost certainly cause

separation anxiety. According to researchers at the Ericsson

ConsumerLab, some people have become so dependent on being able to

use their smartphones to go online anytime, anywhere, that without

that access, they “can no longer handle their daily

routine.”

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Keosha Harvey, a party booker in Burlington, NC, can attest to

that. She uses her iPhone for both personal and business

communications, so she panicked when it crashed earlier this month,

taking all of her “important contacts” with it. Apple replaced it

for free, but she lost her pictures and more than 400 songs, she

says.

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“The most frustrating part is that lost feeling you get when you

are so used to having a phone,” says Harvey, who also has had

Blackberry devices “go dead” on her in the past. “You feel a sense

of nakedness without it.”

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Tonia Zampieri lost her iPhone in a cab on New Year’s Eve while on

vacation in Washington D.C. Having paid her fare with cash, she had

no way of tracking down the cab company, and her older-model phone

didn’t have the tracking software that comes standard now. She had

backed up her contacts on her computer six weeks earlier, but she

lost other data, including videos of her niece.

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The worst part, Zampieri says, was the feeling of being cut

off.

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“I was without a phone for four days, and it was excruciating. I

kept going to look for it but then I’d be like, `I don’t have it.

That’s right,'” Zampieri says. “It’s definitely a borderline

addiction for me.”

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