Article ID: CBB681119396

Does the Internet Make the World Worse? Depression, Aggression and Polarization in the Social Media Age (2021)

unapi

Since the 1990s, the influence of the internet and social media in daily communication has skyrocketed. This has brought both remarkable opportunities and perceived perils. Recent years have seen increases in suicide and mental health concerns, political polarization, and online aggression. Can such phenomenon be connected causally to communication via social media? This article reviews the evidence for perceived deleterious effects of social media on several areas of human welfare, including political polarization, depression and suicide, aggression, and cyberbullying. In addition to examining contemporary evidence from psychological studies, a historical analysis is included to examine whether we truly live in a uniquely difficult time or whether similar patterns of social behavior can be witnessed in other, pre-internet times. It is concluded that evidence may link social media to some negative social outcomes but in ways that are nuanced and complicated, often interacting with user motivations and personalities and situational variables. An increased focus on preregistered, standardized scientific methods and cautious interpretation of effect sizes can help clarify real versus phantom effects of social media.

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Authors & Contributors
Jones, Steve
Selinger, Evan
Carusi, Annamaria
Rainie, Lee
Stark, Luke
Armstrong, David
Journals
Social Studies of Science
Tapuya: Latin American Science, Technology and Society
Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society
History of Psychology
Humanities and Technology Review
Publishers
Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Cambridge University Press
Columbia University Press
Duke University Press
Hampton Press
MIT Press
Concepts
Science and technology studies (STS)
Computers and civilization
Technology and society
Social media
Big data
Communication
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
19th century
20th century, late
Places
China
United States
Mexico
European Union
Hungary
Italy
Institutions
Microsoft (firm)
Facebook (firm)
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