How does social media impact your emotional health? - study

The study offers a new empirically tested model for understanding how our use of social media is associated with a cluster of specific personality and behavioral traits.

Woman with smartphone is seen in front of displayed social media logos in this illustration taken, May 25, 2021. (photo credit: REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION)
Woman with smartphone is seen in front of displayed social media logos in this illustration taken, May 25, 2021.
(photo credit: REUTERS/DADO RUVIC/ILLUSTRATION)

Social media including Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Reddit, Instagram and TikTok are here to stay, so finding out how people use social networking and raising awareness of these are crucial first steps toward ultimately helping people understand how they can avoid their negative aspects and engage in healthier social media usage.  

So say researchers at the Washington University in St. Louis Missouri, who just published a study in the journal Assessment under the title “The Social Media Use Scale: Development and Validation.” It offers a new empirically tested model for understanding how our use of social media is associated with a complex web of social desires and emotional concerns, said Alison Tuck, first author of the study and a doctoral candidate in clinical psychology.

The myriad ways in which we use social media can be grouped into four broad categories, each of which is associated with a cluster of specific personality and behavioral traits, she wrote. Her model is a response to a large body of research that has produced inconsistent and often conflicting findings regarding social media use’s influences on psychological well-being.

“Because of these inconsistent findings, experts have been advocating for research to examine social media use in a more nuanced way. We conducted a series of research studies to figure out what its structure may look like,” said co-author and psychological and brain sciences Prof. Renee Thompson. 

The four types of social media use

Their scale assesses the frequency with which people engage in each of the four types of social media use:

An estimated 60% of adolescents have experienced some form of cyberbullying over social media. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)
An estimated 60% of adolescents have experienced some form of cyberbullying over social media. (credit: Wikimedia Commons)

The belief-based category captures social media activities that express and reinforce negative opinions and is associated with traits related to poorer psychological well-being, greater depression and an urge to seek emotionally upsetting content. Belief-based users may have poor self-control and might avoid boredom by engaging in drama.

Consumption-based use, which is using social media primarily to use entertaining content, is related to scoring higher on traits associated with greater emotional well-being, including greater self-esteem and extraversion and less depression. Consumption-based use is associated with more enjoyment from social media and seeking content that makes one happy.

Image-based social media use focuses on activities that help users create a positive social image, such as making positive posts about themselves or tracking total likes or comments on a post. This category of social media use is associated with a desire to put oneself on display and engage in activities that prop up one’s sense of self-worth and integrity.

Comparison-based use focuses on activities that involve comparing oneself with others or with an idealized version of one’s past. These activities are associated with a host of negative outcomes, including lower social and emotional well-being, concerns over physical appearance and fear of negative evaluation.

Most studies on social media and health have based findings on simple measures of frequency of use or on varying definitions of passive versus active behavior – simple “lurking” on social media compared with posting, commenting and social interaction.


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In developing their scale, Tuck and Thompson tested various models of social media, including the active vs. passive model and found these categories did a relatively poor job of explaining how college students engaged with these platforms. The researchers set out to develop a more fine-grained scale based on a series of studies in which university students aged 18 to 23 years were asked to describe their social media activities.

A series of studies

In the first study, 176 students were asked to spend three minutes using their choice of social media and then provide an open-ended description of their activities and enjoyment. “This is the first study to create a social media scale based on an open-ended response format, which is important because it allows participants to describe their social media use without being confined to predefined categories, such as ‘passive’ or ‘active,’” Tuck said.

In the second and third studies, both of which involved more than 300 college students, researchers asked participants to indicate how often they engaged in social media activities identified in the first study.Participants also completed a battery of online surveys commonly used to score individuals on personality traits including extraversion, open-mindedness, conscientiousness, agreeableness and negative emotionality and behavioral characteristics such as fear of negative evaluation, self-esteem, depression, social physique anxiety, need for approval, need for drama, boredom susceptibility, exhibition narcissism and emotion regulation.

The study revealed important distinctions between image-based and comparison-based social media usage and their connection to depression. “Our data suggest that these types of uses are distinct constructs, each associated with its own set of unique traits,” Tuck said.

The researchers said it is important to continue investigating the different types of social media use.

“Social media use is not all good or all bad for mental health,” Thompson said. “Our research is helping clarify the ways that these types of use are associated with well-being. With our current and future studies, we aim to inform healthy social media use recommendations.”

“This new scale allows us to carve social media at its joints in more nuanced ways that will help all of us start to better understand what is healthy versus unhealthy social media use,” Tuck concluded.