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Research Article

Food for Thought: Parent-Child Face-to-Face Communication and Mobile Phone Use in Eateries

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ABSTRACT

It has become increasingly common for parents and children to engage in individual digital activities which disconnect them from each other while remaining in each other’s presence. Accordingly, this paper examines how parent-child face-to-face communication is associated with mobile phone use during a family meal in eateries. The study included unobtrusive observations of 58 families with children approximately three to six years of age in various eateries. We identified four parent-child face-to-face interaction patterns that occurred when a parent and/or a child used a mobile phone: (1) Communication discouragement during parents’ phone use; (2) Communication discouragement during children’s phone use; (3) Communication facilitation via family photos; and (4) Communication facilitation via a shared phone use. Mobile phone use during family mealtimes in public is thus another example of both the positive and the negative outcomes of media use in family communication.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank our research assistant Dafna Bar at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev for her valuable contribution to this study.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the United States - Israel Binational Science Foundation.

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