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Running head: THE IMPACT OF TECHNOLOGY ON USER LONELINESS: EXPLO
The Impact of Technology on User Loneliness: Exploring the Connection
Phoebessays
February 12, 2026
Abstract
Roberto G. Ortiz [Name] English 1302-160 October 9, 2022 Does Technology Make Users Lonelier? Advancement in technology has a positive and negative impact on its users. Before the beginning of the technology era, communication was challenging and tedious, among other areas in which technology has significant influence. However, the technology era came with defined approaches that eased human operations. Paying close attention to internet use, one can argue that this is among the most influential factors technology offers the human race. Unfortunately, as much as this privilege improves communication regardless of time or distance, its addiction exposes users to negative effects like stress. The current essay analyses the connection between technology use and loneliness, paying special attention to mobile use addictions in response to whether technology makes its users lonelier. After considering various scholars' arguments, the essay wishes to connect ten literature references on the topic and provide a logical trend in response to the correlation between technology use and loneliness among users. Is there a direct correlation between stress and internet addiction? There is a common thread of similarities in response to this question as different authors believe that technology use has direct effects on the user, whether positive or negative (Daei et al. (202); Kaibiao et al. (2-4); and Lu et al. (2-6)). While meditating on the role of loneliness concerning internet dependence, Kaibiao et al. (3) argue behavioral and emotional stress as potential triggers of internet addictions. Modern technology makes life very interesting as people can learn much from the internet. Unfortunately, many are becoming internet-enslaved people attributed to severe addiction, limiting normal/controlled internet use, and exposing many to negative effects like stress and depression in severe cases. Based on this author, family stress, whether emotional stress or behavioral anxiety, enhances the victims' urge to use the internet as a way to avoid or forget such stressors. Arguing from the perception that too much of something is poisonous, such addictions worsen stress levels to the primary victims and others within such families. In connection with Kaibiao et al. (10) arguments with a little extension on stress triggers, Daei et al. (202) argue the relationship between stress and mobile phone addictions from a nomophobia disorder point of view. According to Daei et al. (202), nomophobia is a state of socio-psychological disorder that affects Smartphone users of fears of not having access to such devices. Using 320 students’ clustery sampled, the author examined the relationship between Smartphone use and nomophobia disorder and noted a close correlation between the two. Any thoughts of losing such connection attributed to limited use of smartphones due to educational demands, and parent restriction, among other factors, expose such users to stressful situations as they try to weigh out options that best fit their demands. Unfortunately, even with a defined level of education, the urge to use smartphones remains well-defined with limited controls, which proves stressful. For this reason, the author confirms a positive correlation between nomophobia and smartphone use addictions suggesting possible interventions to curb nomophobia as a potential step in the fight against internet addictions. Still highlighting how stress contributes to internet overreliance negatively impacting the users, Lee et al. (1205-1228) confirm that some students unconsciously become internet enslaved, which limits early interventions to address such addictions. According to Lee et al. (1205-1210), there are potential factors that prove as stress triggers exposing many people to overreliance on mobile phones. Based on these authors, stress directly enhances internet use as the victim tries to source a potential approach to handling escaping stressful events or thoughts. While investigating the relationship between personality traits, social anxiety, and loneliness with preferences for voice and text messaging on mobile phones, these authors noted that most unconsciously become calls and message addicts to seek relief from stressing forms of loneliness. Unfortunately, a habit becomes a disease with time, and such people become phone addicts such that they can barely spend time without engaging with their mobile devices, whether texting or calling others. They conclude that technology addictions do not just come from nowhere but are instead triggered by personal or social stressors leading to the severe psychological and mental torture of the victim in the long run. A fascinating overview of this topic is well reflected by the literature references considered in this essay. Although these pieces of literature differ in their arguments on the connection between media addiction and loneliness, it is evident that, to some significant extent, the two have a close connection. Starting with an article whose arguments contradict most other literature conclusions on the relationship between media addiction and loneliness, Patulny (12-15) refutes that technology makes its users lonelier. Based on this author, how one uses the media determines the outcomes experiences in the long run. If a person uses social media correctly, this author believes it cannot leave any negative effects like loneliness or stress on the user and vice-versa. On the same note, Patulny (3) adds that the urge to use social media is primarily connected to personal interests; thus, one can choose when, why, and the extent of time to spend on media without letting effects like loneliness govern such moves. In a counterattack to Patulny arguments, Tarver (3) argue that technology makes user lonelier as many remains connected without connections. Tarver (1-4) argues the connection between media addictions and loneliness from the connection sphere point of view. Many people get to the internet in search of...
APA 7th Edition— Title centered and bold, double-spaced throughout, 1" margins, Times New Roman 12pt. First line of each paragraph indented 0.5". Running head on first page only.
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