社交媒体使用与青少年心理健康脆弱性的关联机制

IF 16.8 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Nature reviews psychology Pub Date : 2024-05-07 DOI:10.1038/s44159-024-00307-y
Amy Orben, Adrian Meier, Tim Dalgleish, Sarah-Jayne Blakemore
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摘要

关于社交媒体的使用与青少年心理健康之间联系的研究结果参差不齐,缺乏转化证据,尽管我们面临着为家庭、学校和政策制定者提供具体建议的压力。与此同时,人们普遍认识到,行为、认知和神经生物学的发展变化容易导致青少年出现社会情感障碍。在本综述中,我们认为这种发展变化将是社交媒体研究的一个富有成效的重点。具体来说,我们将回顾社交媒体可能会放大那些增加青少年心理健康脆弱性的发展变化的机制。这些机制包括行为的变化,如分享有风险的内容和自我展示,以及认知的变化,如自我概念的改变、社会比较、对社会反馈的反应能力和社会排斥的体验。我们还考虑了提高压力敏感性和改变奖励处理的神经生物学机制。通过关注社交媒体可能与发展变化相互作用从而增加心理健康风险的机制,我们的综述为研究人员提供了一套关键的数字能力工具包,使他们能够在社交媒体环境不断变化的情况下对技术效应进行理论分析和研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Mechanisms linking social media use to adolescent mental health vulnerability
Research linking social media use and adolescent mental health has produced mixed and inconsistent findings and little translational evidence, despite pressure to deliver concrete recommendations for families, schools and policymakers. At the same time, it is widely recognized that developmental changes in behaviour, cognition and neurobiology predispose adolescents to developing socio-emotional disorders. In this Review, we argue that such developmental changes would be a fruitful focus for social media research. Specifically, we review mechanisms by which social media could amplify the developmental changes that increase adolescents’ mental health vulnerability. These mechanisms include changes to behaviour, such as sharing risky content and self-presentation, and changes to cognition, such as modifications in self-concept, social comparison, responsiveness to social feedback and experiences of social exclusion. We also consider neurobiological mechanisms that heighten stress sensitivity and modify reward processing. By focusing on mechanisms by which social media might interact with developmental changes to increase mental health risks, our Review equips researchers with a toolkit of key digital affordances that enables theorizing and studying technology effects despite an ever-changing social media landscape. Declines in adolescent mental health over the past decade have been attributed to social media, but the empirical evidence is mixed. In this Review, Orben et al. describe the mechanisms by which social media could amplify the developmental changes that increase adolescents’ mental health vulnerability.
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