Article Preview
TopMethod
Literature Search Strategies
We used multiple strategies to search the existing literature. These strategies included database search, dialog search with librarians, manual search of references of identified articles, and consultation with identified experts. In particular, 19 databases were searched, including PsycINFO, PubMed, Science Direct, Pubget, Scopus, Applied Science & Technology, Communication, Computers & Applied Sciences Complete, Education Full Text, Education Research Complete, Educational Administration Abstracts, ERIC, Film & Television Literature Index, Health Source - Consumer Edition, Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition, Humanities Full Text, Humanities International Complete, Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection, and Social Sciences Abstracts. Key words such as cell phone use, mobile phone use, cellular phone use, smartphone use, IPhone use, behavior, and behavioral science were searched in different variations and combinations. In addition, we also conducted a dialog search with senior university librarians to confirm our searching results and contacted leading experts for their guidance and consultation.
Exclusion and Inclusion Criteria
We used several exclusion and inclusion criteria to select publications that we have identified concerning the science of cell phone use for further review.
First, we included articles that involve cellular phone, mobile phone, hand phone, basic phones, and smartphones but excluded those that deal with landline phones, cordless phones, car phones, and radio phones (Donner, 2008).
Second, we included articles that directly examine cell phone use but excluded those concerning cell phone design or development. This is because our focus is on the human side rather than the technical side of cell phones.
Third, we included articles that examine cell phone use from a wide variety of disciplines in behavioral sciences but excluded those primarily examining cell phones from the perspectives of computer science, electronica engineering, commerce, industry, and management. We are interested in articles that can provide empirical evidence and/or theoretical thinking regarding elements, patterns, processes, effects, mechanisms, factors, and domains, of cell phone use.
The Final Size of the Literature
Our literature search generated a total of 3305 publications from 1991 to 2013 that explicitly examined the use of cell phones across various disciplines in behavioral sciences, such as medicine, education, psychology, sociology, political science, and business.