Skip to main content

Does the type of device you use affect your problem-solving skills? Study says yes

Here’s some food for thought: What if the type of device you use affects your problem-solving skills? Research published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior suggests it just might. Specifically, smartphone users have been found to exhibit more rational, utilitarian decision-making, while their counterparts on PC were found to let emotions undermine their logic more frequently.

In the experiment, roughly 1,000 subjects were asked to decide between two possible outcomes of a moral dilemma. Some were assigned a smartphone to make their judgment call, while others were on a computer. The dilemma took the form of the classic “Trolley Problem,” in which a train is about to hit multiple workers, and the subject is asked if they would divert the train to instead kill one individual rather than several.

Recommended Videos

There were a few modifications made to the question. In the first trial, subjects could save five workers by pushing one man off a bridge and onto the tracks well before it reached the workers. In another, the subject could pull a switch forcing the train to change tracks, where there would be only one victim instead of five.

In both cases, smartphone users exhibited a higher propensity to choose the utilitarian option — the killing of one to save many — over what researchers termed the deontological response, which would prohibit killing of any nature, regardless of the circumstances.

Not surprisingly, significantly more subjects opted to pull the switch than push the man off the bridge. Regarding the switch question, 81 percent of smartphone users took action, compared to 77 percent of PC users. For the other dilemma, the gulf was a bit wider: 34 percent of phone respondents decided to sacrifice the man’s life, while 22 percent of subjects on computers elected to do the same. As the study states, the act of pulling the switch is considered to be much less emotionally aversive.

So how can we explain the difference? What is it about smartphones that make us into unfeeling, less emotionally driven actors? According to the study, it’s all about the lack of distractions.

The researchers conclude that the digital context of smartphone use is one of time pressure, which facilitates more rash decision making. Smartphones also focus our attention on the task at hand, and cause us to filter out secondary cues much more effectively. Without the time and multitasking resources to consider all the options available, we yield to the numbers argument. On the other hand, experts say computers grant us those luxuries, and thus make moral decisions more challenging by opening the door to increased emotional sway.

As technology bears an increasing influence over our everyday lives, there’s never been a more crucial time to study its effects on how we conduct ourselves — and how different devices and uses might complicate matters further.

Adam Ismail
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adam’s obsession with tech began at a young age, with a Sega Dreamcast – and he’s been hooked ever since. Previously…
This Lenovo ThinkPad is usually $2,059 — today it’s under $1,000
The Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga 2-in-1 laptop in tablet mode.

You can enjoy the best of both worlds between laptop deals and tablet deals if you go for a 2-in-1 laptop like the Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 4, which is currently on sale from Lenovo itself at 54% off. Its estimated value of $2,059 may seem a bit too high, but in any case, it's a smart purchase at its discounted price of just $931. You'll have to be quick in finishing the purchase process for this device though, as it may be back to its regular price as soon as tomorrow.

Why you should buy the Lenovo ThinkPad L13 Yoga Gen 4 2-in-1 laptop

Read more
‘You can’t lick a badger twice’: How Google’s AI Overview hallucinates idioms
Samples of Google AI Overview errors.

The latest AI trend is a funny one, as a user has discovered that you can plug a made-up phrase into Google and append it with "meaning," then Google's AI Overview feature will hallucinate a meaning for the phrase.

Historian Greg Jenner kicked off the trend with a post on Bluesky in which he asked Google to explain the meaning of "You can't lick a badger twice." AI Overview helpfully explained that this expression means that you can't deceive someone a second time after they've already been tricked once -- which seems like a reasonable explanation, but ignores the fact that this idiom didn't exist before this query went viral.

Read more
You can now try Adobe’s new app to digitally sign your artwork for free
Adobe Content Authenticity app graphic.

First announced in October, Adobe's Content Authenticity app is now in public beta, and anyone can try it for free. The app allows people to add "Content Credentials" to their digital work -- invisible and secure metadata that shares information about the creator. AI can't edit it out like a watermark and it still works even when someone screenshots the original file.

You can add various information to your Content Credentials, such as your name (which can be verified via LinkedIn) and your social media accounts. You can also express your preferences toward generative AI training. This is an experimental feature aiming to get a headstart on future AI regulation that Adobe hopes will respect the creator's choice regarding training data.

Read more