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  1. In an intriguing set of findings, the researchers identified links between particular social-media platforms and depression in certain age groups. For example, Facebook use was associated with depression among people younger than 35, but not for those over 35. In the over-35 group, TikTok and Snapchat were connected to depression symptoms.

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  2. 21 mar 2019 · While becoming inextricable to our daily lives, online social media are blamed for increasing mental health problems in younger people. This systematic review synthesized evidence on the influence of social media use on depression, anxiety and psychological distress in adolescents.

  3. Social media is profoundly changing the way many people interact, and there are growing concerns that social media use is negatively affecting individual’s mental health. This chapter will review research which has correlated social media use to measures relating to depression, self-esteem, anxiety, and loneliness.

  4. 23 maj 2023 · Some studies about social media and mental health reveal that there’s a correlation between networking sites and depression. Other research goes a step further, finding that social media may very well cause depression.

  5. 7 mar 2022 · Social Media and clinical depression. If scrolling social media is keeping you from sleeping, maintaining a job, or taking care of your hygiene and nutrition, your social media use may have...

  6. 23 lis 2021 · In this analysis of survey data, we found that some forms of social media use—in particular, Snapchat, Facebook, and YouTube—were associated with greater levels of self-reported depressive symptoms on a subsequent survey.

  7. Examining the within-person effects of depressive symptoms on increased social media use over 6 years during early and late adolescence, Puukko et al. found that depressive symptoms predicted increases in social media use for both boys and girls. Conversely, social media use was not found to predict depressive symptoms.

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