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What is Biological Time

Managing Screen Time in an Online Society
Refers to human beings as biological clocks, including real and synchronized processes such as cycles, spirals, circadian rhythms, oscillations and oscillatory processes, which are of central importance for human functioning and linear to sustain life. The biological basis of preferences for morning activity patterns (“early birds”) or evening activity patterns (“night owls”) explains the variations in the rhythmic expression of biological or behavioral human patterns.
Published in Chapter:
The Screens of Our Time: On “Time” – Implications for Screen Time Research
Mikael Wiberg (Umeå University, Sweden) and Britt Wiberg (Umeå University, Sweden)
Copyright: © 2019 |Pages: 24
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-8163-5.ch006
Abstract
Despite the increasing interest in understanding screen time and its effects, there are very few papers published on how the notion of “screen time” is conceptualized – both in terms of what “time” refers to in this context and in terms of what a “screen” denotes nowadays. In an attempt to contribute to this lack of theoretical grounding, the authors outline four theoretical grounds for understanding time. Further, they suggest that the notion of “screen” needs to be problematized in similar ways. In this chapter, the authors illustrate how the four different conceptualizations of “time” in relation to this broader understanding of screens open up for a new range of studies of “screen time,” and they suggest that this conceptualization is necessary in order to move toward.
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