smurphee.bsky.social
@smurphee.bsky.social
Reposted
Proud to share our new paper on how patterns of mobile communication relate to feeling rushed.

We combined experience sampling and smartphone log data, capturing frequency, duration, fragmentation, and notifications across four app categories, to examine direct and indirect links via task juggling.
Does your 📱 make you feel rushed?⏳

kvgaever.bsky.social, daviddeseg.bsky.social, smurphee.bsky.social‬ & Mariek M. P. Vanden Abeele show how smartphone email, chat, work app & social media use shape time pressure and task juggling.

� https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/2050157925137707010
October 14, 2025 at 8:30 AM
Reposted
As we explain in our recent paper, psychology lacks the coordination that is present in other fields. We do studies we can do, instead of getting together to do the studies we should do.

Paper: www.nature.com/articles/s41...

Preprint: osf.io/preprints/ps...
August 3, 2025 at 6:08 PM
Reposted
This Perspective is accompanied by a Correspondence by @jbakcoleman.bsky.social which argues that randomized controlled trials cannot identify social media’s causal effects

🚨FREE 🚨web access (with registration): go.nature.com/4o8tSJN
PDF: rdcu.be/eyaDT
July 28, 2025 at 1:40 PM
Reposted
New in cognitive psychology: Analyzing the Affective Consequences of Normal Sleep Fluctuations: A Multiverse Investigation Using Experience Sampling Data, from Stephen Murphy, @kvgaever.bsky.social, @daviddeseg.bsky.social, and Mariek Vanden Abeele doi.org/10.1525/coll...
Analyzing the Affective Consequences of Normal Sleep Fluctuations: A Multiverse Investigation Using Experience Sampling Data
How much we sleep at night is believed to impact next-day affective experiences. Yet, the existing research is encumbered by methodological limitations. To address this issue we harnessed experience s...
doi.org
June 30, 2025 at 9:13 PM
Reposted
🚀Very excited to finally see our paper on nonsignificance misinterpretations published! 📈
Together, @smurphee.bsky.social, Aurelio Fernández, Linda Reimann and I investigated the prevalence of "p > .05 = absence of an effect" interpretations. (1/4)
doi.org/10.1098/rsos...
March 19, 2025 at 1:06 PM