Publication type
Journal Article
Authors
Publication date
April 15, 2025
Summary:
Adolescents spend more time on social media than ever, making it necessary to understand the impact of social media use on their well-being. A largely unexplored, but potentially important, risk factor which may moderate effects of social media on well-being is material deprivation. Using 10-wave longitudinal data from 23,155 adolescents collected between 2009 and 2019, we test whether adolescents who spend more time on social media report lower levels of well-being, and whether differences in deprivation are associated with heightened sensitivity to positive or negative effects of their social media use. We find that deprived adolescents have less access to social media. However, those adolescents from deprived households who do have social media access spend slightly more time using it. Although we find that deprived adolescents are less satisfied with their lives, deprivation does not seem to affect the longitudinal link from time spent on social media to life satisfaction.
Published in
Computers in Human Behavior
Volume
Volume: 165:108541
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chb.2024.108541
ISSN
7475632
Subjects
Notes
Open Access
Under a Creative Commons license
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