Author:
Scarpulla Emily,Stosic Morgan D.,Weaver Adele E.,Ruben Mollie A.
Abstract
IntroductionWhile increased time spent on social media can be negatively related to one’s overall mental health, social media research often fails to account for what behaviors users are actually engaging in while they are online. The present research helps to address this gap by measuring participants’ active and passive social media behavioral styles and investigates whether and how these two social media behavioral styles are related to depression, anxiety, and stress, and the mediating role of emotion recognition ability in this relationship.MethodsA pre-study (N = 128) tested whether various social media behaviors reliably grouped into active and passive behavioral styles, and a main study (N = 139) tested the relationships between social media use style, emotion recognition, and mental health.ResultsWhile we did not find evidence of a mediating relationship between these variables, results supported that more active social media use was related to more severe anxiety and stress as well as poorer emotion recognition skill, while passive social media use was unrelated to these outcomes.DiscussionThese findings highlight that, beyond objective time spent on social media, future research must consider how users are spending their time online.
Reference70 articles.
1. The importance of assessing clinical phenomena in mechanical Turk research;Arditte;Psychol. Assess.,2016
2. Linking loneliness, shyness, smartphone addiction symptoms, and patterns of smartphone use to social capital;Bian;Soc. Sci. Comput. Rev.,2015
3. The effectiveness of training to improve person perception accuracy: a meta-analysis;Blanch-Hartigan;Basic Appl. Soc. Psychol.,2012
4. Amazon’s Mechanical Turk: A new source of inexpensive, yet high-quality, data?;Buhrmester;Perspectives Psychol. Sci.,2011
5. Social network activity and social well-being;Burke,2010
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献