
@Article{jpa.2026.073231,
AUTHOR = {Wanqing Lin, Mohd Azrin Mohd Nasir, Suzila Binti Ismail},
TITLE = {External risk factors for smartphone addiction in adolescents: A systematic literature review},
JOURNAL = {Journal of Psychology in Africa},
VOLUME = {36},
YEAR = {2026},
NUMBER = {1},
PAGES = {143--152},
URL = {http://www.techscience.com/jpa/v36n1/66355},
ISSN = {1815-5626},
ABSTRACT = {This systematic review synthesizes empirical research on external risk factors for adolescent smartphone addiction. Scopus and Web of Science were searched for English peer-reviewed empirical articles from 2008 onward; 28 met inclusion criteria (excluding non-adolescents, generic internet addiction, non-empirical work, or non-English). Thematic synthesis organized findings into three external risk domains—family, school, and peers—considering cultural/contextual mechanisms. Family dynamics (parental phubbing, harsh parenting, dysfunction), school stressors, and adverse peer relationships were identified as accumulating, direct and indirect contributors to smartphone addiction. These operate within a techno-ecological framework, where digital technologies amplify vulnerabilities and create new pathways for maladaptive use. Evidence favors an ecological, multi-level perspective. Future research should use longitudinal designs, standardize measures across cultures, and examine understudied regions—especially Africa—to guide culturally sensitive interventions.},
DOI = {10.32604/jpa.2026.073231}
}



