Research Protocol for the Google Health Digital Wellbeing Study

Ari Winbush
Nicholas Allen
Andrew Barakat
Felicia Cordeiro
Daniel McDuff
Allen Jiang
Ryann Crowley
JMIR Research Protocols (2024)

Abstract

The impact of digital device use on health and wellbeing is a pressing question to which individuals, families, schools, policy makers, legislators, and digital designers are all demanding answers. However, the scientific literature on this topic to date is marred by small and/or unrepresentative samples, poor measurement of core constructs (e.g., device use, smartphone addiction), and a limited ability to address the psychological and behavioral mechanisms that may underlie the relationships between device use and wellbeing. A number of recent authoritative reviews have made urgent calls for future research projects to address these limitations. The critical role of research is to identify which patterns of use are associated with benefits versus risks, and who is more vulnerable to harmful versus beneficial outcomes, so that we can pursue evidence-based product design, education, and regulation aimed at maximizing benefits and minimizing risks of smartphones and other digital devices. We describe a protocol for a Digital Wellbeing Study (DWB) to help answer these questions.
×