Social media and youth mental health: Simple narratives produce biased interpretations.

IF 3.1 Q2 PSYCHIATRY Journal of psychopathology and clinical science Pub Date : 2024-09-09 DOI:10.1037/abn0000950
Craig J R Sewall,Douglas A Parry
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Abstract

Many academics and pundits contend that social media use is the primary cause of an international youth mental health crisis. However, these claims often rely on correlational evidence, ignoring the confounding effects of developmental, environmental, social, and psychological factors that influence mental health. This oversimplifies the complex etiology of mental health problems. We call for a more nuanced understanding of the role of social media in youth mental health that avoids oversimplification. Additionally, we urge researchers to move beyond vague, narrative-driven verbal theories and encode them into precise, testable causal models. Using simulation techniques and specification curve analyses, we show how misspecified models that ignore these confounding factors can lead to biased conclusions about social media's adverse effects. This simplistic focus on social media use diverts attention from the broader factors contributing to youth mental health problems, hindering the development of effective interventions and support. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
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社交媒体与青少年心理健康:简单的叙述会产生偏颇的解释。
许多学者和专家认为,社交媒体的使用是造成国际青少年心理健康危机的主要原因。然而,这些说法往往依赖于相关证据,忽视了影响心理健康的发展、环境、社会和心理因素的混杂效应。这过于简化了心理健康问题的复杂病因。我们呼吁对社交媒体在青少年心理健康中的作用有更细致的了解,避免过度简化。此外,我们敦促研究人员超越模糊的、以叙述为导向的口头理论,将其编码为精确的、可检验的因果模型。利用模拟技术和规范曲线分析,我们展示了忽略这些混杂因素的错误规范模型是如何导致对社交媒体不良影响得出有偏差的结论的。这种对社交媒体使用的简单化关注转移了人们对导致青少年心理健康问题的更广泛因素的关注,从而阻碍了有效干预和支持的发展。(PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA,保留所有权利)。
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