
Between 12 and 17: Everyday Mistakes Can Make Children Insecure Adults
For them, researchers developed a scale called the Device Attachment Interference Scale and applied it to a representative sample of 600 U.S...
- Center-left1
- Center-right1
1 agency rewrite / co-publication detected
Summary
Home World Status: 17.07.2026, 22:32 Comments Follow us on Google If parents constantly look at their smartphone, it harms their children. This is shown by a new study published in July 2026 in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
Cross-referenced from 2 sources.
Factual coreconfirmed by several independent voices
Insufficient core: not enough independent confirmations to retain a shared fact.
Reported detailssecondary facts, each attributed to its source
Home World Status: 17.07.2026, 22:32 Comments Follow us on Google If parents constantly look at their smartphone, it harms their children.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1This is shown by a new study published in July 2026 in the journal Frontiers in Psychology.
according to Frankfurter Rundschau +1
Disputedincompatible versions — to verify
No factual contradiction detected between sources.
Framing by sidesame fact, different words — loaded terms highlighted
No notable framing divergence.
Blind spotwhat one side keeps silent
No blind spot detected: every side covers the same facts.
Sources2 sources cross-checked
Center-left1
Center-right1
