By Geoffrey Mohan
August 14,
2013, 3:03 p.m.
Don't press the like
button: Facebook is a bummer that makes us feel worse about our lives,
according to new research.
Facebook users in a study
led by the University of Michigan wound up feeling worse about themselves after
two weeks, and their moment-to-moment mood darkened the more they browsed the
social medium. It didn't seem to matter how big their network was, how supportive
they thought their friends were, nor why they went to Facebook in the first
place, according to the study published online Wednesday in PLOS One.
"We were able to show
on a moment-to-moment basis throughout the day how people’s mood fluctuated
depending on their Facebook usage,” said University of Michigan social
psychologist Ethan Kross, lead author of the study.
"We measured lots and
lots of other personality and behavioral dimensions, like, for example,
frequency of Facebook use," Kross said. "But none of the factors that
we assessed influenced the results. The more you used Facebook, the more your
mood dropped."
The study adds to a body of
work examining social media's effect on well-being, much of it offering mixed
diagnoses. Looking at your own profile can be self-affirming, according to a recent
study. And a survey of Facebook users suggested that it modestly increased life
satisfaction, social trust, civic engagement, and political participation.
But other studies have
suggested Facebook can evoke envy of others' activities and profile, leaving
users with diminished self-images. Another study suggested that people with low
self-esteem don't reap a benefit from tinkering with their online image,
either.
None of those studies,
however, followed people over time. The University of Michigan study involved
82 college-aged volunteers -- a core demographic among Facebook's nearly 700
million active daily users -- who answered questionnaires five times a day for
14 days, and rated their well-being at the beginning and end.
Worry did not predict
changes in Facebook use, but loneliness did, according to the study.
Nonetheless, when researchers controlled for loneliness, the relationship
between Facebook use and mood and satisfaction was insignificant, Kross said.
“Loneliness predicted
Facebook use, and loneliness also predicted how bad people felt," Kross
said. "But the effect of Facebook on how people felt was independent of
loneliness.”
“One of the things we don’t
know is what aspect of Facebook use is contributing to these results,” Kross
said. “Facebook and online social networks more generally represent a very new
way in which human beings are interacting, and we’re really just beginning to
scratch the surface as to how exactly these interactions work and how they
influence us.”
Catalina Toma, a University
of Wisconsin communication researcher who found that Facebook users could
increase their self-esteem, said seemingly contradictory findings among studies
reflect the complexity of the medium and point out the need to drill deeper
into what people do while on Facebook.
"I think what's
happening, honestly, is that Facebook is such a gigantic space where so many
different activities take place," said Toma, who was not involved in the
study. "So for us to be simply talking about Facebook use is an over-simplification.
Facebook use is not just one thing; it is many, many different things."
Kross and fellow
researchers conducted an exploratory analysis of the data that suggests a
linear relationship between online communication and face-to-face interaction.
As both increase, feelings of well-being decline.
“The negative effect of
Facebook use on happiness became more pronounced the more you interacted with
other people within that time frame," Kross said. “It’s very likely that
there are going to be a multitude of mechanisms that explain this effect.”
Like other social media,
Facebook affords people the opportunity to contemplate, edit and enhance their
presentation in ways that are difficult if not impossible during impromptu
social interactions in the flesh. You can take hours to come up with a clever
response, whereas most people have long left the cocktail party when they think
of the perfect riposte.
Toma suggested that users'
emotions and sense of worth may be negatively influenced by the discord between
tailored online images of others and their unedited view of themselves.
"Instead of doing a
person-to-person profile, you're comparing a profile and a person," Toma
said.
Studies have shown that
users tend to put their best foot forward, both Toma and Kross noted.
Still, other studies
indicate that the information in people's profiles closely matches their actual
personality -- enough so that researchers could make predictions based only on
the person's "like" preferences. You are what you
like, in
other words.
Whether any of this will
make you feel better, however, may depend on whether you're reading this on
Facebook.
From (HERE)
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