South Korean teenagers are so attached to their mobile phones that some
researchers are classifying them as 'addicts', according to recent reports.
Almost a third are obsessed with their phones to the point that they
sometimes imagine hearing them ringing when they are not.
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Forty per cent send over 1,000 text messages every month, and a similar
percentage of students say they habitually send or receive text messages or play
games during classes.
These and other findings are contained in a
survey
of 1,100 mobile phone users, aged 14 to 19, which was carried out last month by
Korea's Far East University on behalf of the country's
Ministry of
Communication.
According to the survey, a fifth refused to be parted from their phones even
while bathing.
Mobile games, played by 40 per cent of Koreans, are also causing concern. One
22 year-old university student told a
local
newspaper that he played games on his phone three to four hours a day and
that during classes he and many of his classmates sat at the back of the class
surreptitiously playing.
Another said that he kept one phone for calls, and one for games. A
27-year-old office worker interviewed said that he sneaked into the office
toilets to play mobile games four or five times a day.
A third of the survey respondents reported auditory hallucinations, for
example 'hearing' their phone ringing when it is not. "Even though I set my
cellphone to vibrate when calls come in, I sometimes hear my phone ringing," a
female high-school student told the
JoongAng Daily.
Young people in South Korea are among the most wired in the world. Almost 80
per cent of the country's 48 million people have mobile phones, according to
Jong In Yang, an analyst with
Korea Investment and
Securities.
Among teenagers, owning a mobile phone is seen as essential to having a
normal social life; mobile device ownership is heavily concentrated in the hands
of the under-40s, earlier research has shown.
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