CONCEPT
Phone Effect
The measurable degradation of conversation quality when a mobile device is merely <em>present</em>—the empirical finding that possibility of elsewhere erodes willingness to be fully here.
The phone effect names the phenomenon, documented across multiple studies and central to Turkle's Reclaiming Conversation, that the presence of a mobile phone during face-to-face interaction reduces the depth, intimacy, and quality of the conversation—even when the phone is not used, not touched, not acknowledged. Participants in phone-present conditions reported feeling less connected to conversational partners, rated partners as less empathic, disclosed less personal information, and produced shallower content by objective coding measures. The effect operates not through distraction (the phone never rang) but through the awareness of possibility—the knowledge that this conversation is not the only option, that the world outside this encounter is accessible, that either party could choose at any moment to be elsewhere.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The canonical experiment placed strangers in conversation with either a phone or a notebook on the table between them. The notebook sessions produced typical stranger-conversation outcomes. The phone sessions produced measurably thinner exchanges. Replications confirmed the pattern across demographics, relationships (strangers, friends, romantic partners), and settings.