INCREDIBLY important piece of research. A must-read if you are in the youth mental health field.https://t.co/QT3qEvGivj
— MindGames Weldon (@MindGamesWeldon) May 4, 2021
Always at the end: This study only evaluated the time spent using the technology and did not examine how it was being used. The study relied heavily on self-reporting, which can be inaccurate. https://t.co/5OTFnJwdId
— Paul Armstrong (@paul__armstrong) May 8, 2021
Delighted to share our paper @vuorre & @OrbenAmy evaluating the association between adolescents’ tech engagement & mental health problems (1990-2017) is now published in Clinical @PsychScience! https://t.co/TsSHbqoqnu
— Andrew Przybylski (@ShuhBillSkee) May 4, 2021
INCREDIBLY important piece of research. A must-read if you are in the youth mental health field.https://t.co/QT3qEvGivj
— MindGames Weldon (@MindGamesWeldon) May 4, 2021
It is. The actual paper: "There Is No Evidence That Associations Between Adolescents’ Dig. Tech Engagement & Mental Health Probs Have Increased" v @vuorre @orbenamy @ShuhBillSkee https://t.co/qdBHcpVTOH Interesting they compared it to TV viewing in late 20th c. & concerns thereof https://t.co/3IU70ulgl6
— annecollier (@annecollier) May 8, 2021
Paper here: “There Is No Evidence That Associations Between Adolescents’ Digital Technology Engagement and Mental Health Problems Have Increased” https://t.co/eeLnJpXsHn
— Prof. Tom Crick (@ProfTomCrick) May 5, 2021
“We urge transparent and credible collaborations between scientists and technology companies”?
— Isabela Granic (@PlayNiceInst) May 4, 2021
There Is No Evidence That Associations Between Adolescents’ Digital Technology Engagement and Mental Health Problems Have Increased - Vuorre, Orben, Przybylski https://t.co/IkNUOJMKz7
"There Is No Evidence That Associations Between Adolescents’ Digital Technology Engagement and Mental Health Problems Have Increased" @vuorre @OrbenAmy @ShuhBillSkee find. Read coverage in the Times, full paper based on 1991-2017 data from 430k people here https://t.co/4jB9Qps2zz https://t.co/aXlxIhjTc9
— Rasmus Kleis Nielsen (@rasmus_kleis) May 4, 2021
Examination of 3 nat. representative samples re: changes in relationship of tech engagement & mental health; overall, little evidence of change. https://t.co/lyNNrZIt1t pic.twitter.com/xcSq6HiJNC
— Daniel Willingham (@DTWillingham) May 4, 2021
Contrary to popular belief, there remains "little association" between technology use and mental-health problems, a study of more than 430,000 10 to 15-year-olds suggests. https://t.co/fYNDepQfHm
— Justin Lehmiller (@JustinLehmiller) May 7, 2021
Complex study finding weak & inconsistent links between changing technology & poor mental health, inc suicidal thoughts.
— louis appleby (@ProfLAppleby) May 5, 2021
Doesn’t mean no harms from social media.
Does mean blaming social media for rising emotional probs in CYP is simplistic at best. https://t.co/2TWJRF00oW
You know what? People who sooo, sooo want the Internet and screen time to be the answer to why young people are getting sadder and iller will pay not a fig of attention to this. Because people love 'just so stories' about mental heath https://t.co/1pzQoaxWTJ
— Mark Brown (@MarkOneinFour) May 4, 2021
There remains "little association" between technology use and mental-health problems, a study of more than 430,000 10 to 15-year-olds suggests. https://t.co/oUfiAg4Dxy
— Raja Adnan Ahmed (@drraja_) May 5, 2021
"There remains "little association" between technology use and mental-health problems, a study of more than 430,000 10 to 15-year-olds suggests." Teens, Tech and Mental Health: Oxford Study Finds No Link https://t.co/h0PDERxYhz #MentalHealth #Wellbeing
— #ConnectedLearning (@TheCLAlliance) May 5, 2021