Asserts a revised psychological perspective is needed to understand the effects of social network technologies.
Delineates the key elements and social psychological effects of social media.
Specifies the cognitive mechanisms underlying why people check their mobile devices in daily life -- and why they matter.
Highlights the past successes and future opportunities of technology habit research.
Reviews how mobile communication has become embedded in individual and societal cognition.
Anticipates how social cognition may change with augmented reality.
Reviews Rich Ling's book "Taken for Grantedness" on the changing role of mobile phones in society.
Shows how the emotional responses to active Facebook posting depend on temporal and spatial factors.
Shows how mobile and PC Facebook use differ from one another and validates surveys measures for future research.
Shows how college students reflect on their past Facebook behavior and manage their identities over time.
Shows how texting depends on the interaction of automatic and immersive cognition, along with their links to trait self-regulation.
Shows how ephemeral affordances produce distinctive social and emotional experiences.
Shows how texting while driving is determined in part by automatic tendencies and personalized phone habits.
Shows how distracted phone use while driving and walking is predicted by habits, mindfulness, and self-control.
Shows how passive -- but not active -- Facebook use is associated with negative affective well-being.