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Annotated Bibliography
Berryman, Chloe, Christopher J. Ferguson, and Charles Negy. "Social media use and
mental health among young adults." Psychiatric Quarterly 89 2018: 307–314.
This study examines how social media use affects young individuals' mental health. It
examines time spent, significance in users' lives, and vague booking—posting ambiguous,
attention-grabbing content—on social media. Social media use was not associated with poor
mental health, except for incomplete booking, contrary to concerns. The findings suggest that
social media's mental health risks may be unjustified.
Evaluation: "Psychiatric Quarterly" published this source, boosting its credibility. The
study's correlational technique and huge sample size boost reliability. Academic language
and impartiality are present. However, publication date is important because more current
studies may provide additional information. It presents counterarguments and a balanced
perspective to show the problem's complexity.
Coyne, Sarah M., et al. "Does time spent using social media impact mental health? An
eight-year longitudinal study." Computers in human behavior 104 2020: 106160.
This longitudinal study analyzes social media use and mental health in 13–20-yearolds. This study found no association between social media use and individual mental health
difficulties, contrary to earlier cross-sectional research. The authors argue that screen time
should not be the main factor affecting mental health from social media.
Evaluation: This material is from "Computers in Human Behavior," a credible
journal. The longitudinal design improves reliability. It provides a balanced perspective on
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social media and mental health and offers new insights. The recent publication makes it
relevant. This source disproves the myth that social media use worsens mental health, which
might help explain the complex relationship between the two.
O'reilly, Michelle, et al. "Is social media bad for mental health and wellbeing?
Exploring the perspectives of adolescents." Clinical child psychology and
psychiatry 23.4 2018: 601–613.
Teens' mental health and social media use are examined in this source. Three themes
from focus groups are that social media causes anxiety and mood problems, hosts
cyberbullying, and is often depicted as an addiction. Social media is seen as a threat to teens'
mental health; thus, more research is needed to examine its benefits and warn them of its
risks.
Credibility: "Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry," a reputable publication,
published this source. It enriches the discussion by revealing teens' perspectives. The
reference seems impartial, and the wording is clear. The article was published in 2018. Thus,
new perspectives emerged.
Hou, Yubo, et al. "Social media addiction: Its impact, mediation, and intervention."
Cyberpsychology: Journal of psychosocial research on cyberspace 13.1 2019.
Summary: This study evaluates college students' mental health, social media
addiction, and academic achievement. Self-esteem mediates the harmful effects of social
media addiction on mental health and academic achievement. The study's two-stage self-help
intervention method decreases social media addiction and enhances mental health and
academic performance.
Evaluation: "Cyberpsychology" publishes a reliable source. The study benefits from
the research design and intervention program. Scholarly language and no bias are present. It's
from 2019, so a fresh study may have expanded on it. This source helps explain social media
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addiction and its impacts, as well as ways to treat it. It can inform social media addiction
prevention and assist talks.
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Work Cited
Berryman, Chloe, Christopher J. Ferguson, and Charles Negy. "Social media use and mental
health among young adults." Psychiatric Quarterly 89 2018: 307–314.
Coyne, Sarah M., et al. "Does time spent using social media impact mental health? An eightyear longitudinal study." Computers in human behavior 104 2020: 106160.
Hou, Yubo, et al. "Social media addiction: Its impact, mediation, and intervention."
Cyberpsychology: Journal of psychosocial research on cyberspace 13.1 2019.
O'reilly, Michelle, et al. "Is social media bad for mental health and wellbeing? Exploring the
perspectives of adolescents." Clinical child psychology and psychiatry 23.4 2018:
601–613.
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