Does social media use make us happy? A meta-analysis on social media and positive well-being outcomes

IF 4.1 Q1 PSYCHIATRY SSM. Mental health Pub Date : 2024-06-26 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmmh.2024.100331
Laura Marciano , Jeffrey Lin , Taisuke Sato , Sundas Saboor , Kasisomayajula Viswanath
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Abstract

In social media use research on mental health, a comprehensive summary of the association between social media use and “positive” well-being in all its nuances, including different well-being indicators considered separately, is lacking. To fill the gap, we carried out a meta-analytic review of the literature by including 78 studies published between 2009 and September 2022. In our meta-analyses, we explored the association between social media use (time spent on using social media, active and passive use, communication, problematic use, social comparison, and other positive and negative experiences) and well-being (conceptualized as hedonic, eudaimonic, social, and other positive indices). Hedonic well-being, i.e., experiencing positive emotions and life satisfaction, was associated with social media communication (r=0.11) and positive online experiences (r=0.21) and negatively with problematic social media use (r=−0.13) and social comparison on social media (r=−0.30). Eudaimonic well-being, i.e., a sense of purpose and meaning, was only negatively related to problematic social media use (r=−0.26). Social well-being was positively related to social media time (r=0.07) and social media communication (r=0.18). Also, overall measures of positive well-being were associated with active social media use (r=0.08), communication through social media (r=0.12), number of friends (r=0.14), social media intensity (r=0.21), and other positive experiences (r=0.19). Conversely, social media comparison (r=−0.30) and problematic social media use (r=−0.13) showed negative correlations with positive well-being. The analyses add to our understanding of how social media may contribute to ill-being and well-being by disentangling positive from negative effects, and pave the way for interventions aiming at using social media to improve well-being.

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使用社交媒体会让我们快乐吗?关于社交媒体和积极幸福结果的荟萃分析
在有关心理健康的社交媒体使用研究中,缺乏对社交媒体使用与 "积极 "幸福感之间关系的所有细微差别(包括单独考虑的不同幸福感指标)的全面总结。为了填补这一空白,我们对 2009 年至 2022 年 9 月间发表的 78 篇文献进行了元分析综述。在荟萃分析中,我们探讨了社交媒体使用(使用社交媒体的时间、主动和被动使用、交流、有问题的使用、社会比较以及其他积极和消极体验)与幸福感(概念化为享乐型、幸福型、社会型和其他积极指数)之间的关联。享乐型幸福感,即体验积极情绪和生活满意度,与社交媒体交流(r=0.11)和积极的在线体验(r=0.21)相关,与社交媒体的问题使用(r=-0.13)和社交媒体上的社会比较(r=-0.30)呈负相关。幸福感(即目的感和意义感)只与社交媒体使用问题呈负相关(r=-0.26)。社会幸福感与社交媒体时间(r=0.07)和社交媒体交流(r=0.18)呈正相关。此外,积极幸福感的总体测量与社交媒体的活跃使用(r=0.08)、社交媒体的沟通(r=0.12)、朋友数量(r=0.14)、社交媒体的强度(r=0.21)和其他积极体验(r=0.19)相关。相反,社交媒体比较(r=-0.30)和社交媒体使用问题(r=-0.13)与积极幸福感呈负相关。这些分析通过将积极影响与消极影响区分开来,加深了我们对社交媒体如何可能导致不幸福和幸福的理解,并为旨在利用社交媒体改善幸福的干预措施铺平了道路。
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来源期刊
SSM. Mental health
SSM. Mental health Social Psychology, Health
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
118 days
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