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Maternal technoference and children's social withdrawal: Role of screen exposure and companionship

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Family Relations / Family Relations Interdisciplinary Journal of Applied Family Studies

Published online on

Abstract

["Family Relations, EarlyView. ", "\nABSTRACT\n\nObjective\nThis study examines the impact of maternal “technoference” on children's social withdrawal, with screen exposure as a potential mediator and maternal companionship during screen time as a moderator of this mediation.\n\n\nBackground\nIncreasing availability of digital media has caused disruptions in communication and interaction, referred to as “technoference.” However, the underlying mechanisms and protective factors that mitigate the intergenerational effects of technoference in the Chinese context remain unexplored.\n\n\nMethod\nThis study included 785 preschoolers (50.2% boys) and their mothers from Anhui and Guangdong provinces. Mothers completed online questionnaires on technoference, companionship, demographics, children's screen time, and social withdrawal. Moderated mediation effects were analyzed using SPSS Statistics 27.0 with Macro Process Model 14.\n\n\nResults and conclusions\nTechnoference was positively related to children's screen time. Screen time was positively associated with social withdrawal and mediated the effect of technoference on social withdrawal. Maternal companionship moderated the effect of screen time on social withdrawal and the indirect effect of technoference on social withdrawal through screen time, whereby the two effects are weaker when companionship is high.\n\n\nImplication\nOur findings highlight the significance of screen exposure duration and maternal companionship in developing interventions for Chinese mothers and children experiencing technoference.\n\n"]