Social Media and Depression
A Croatian study (Pantic et al., 2012) found that time spent on Facebook by high school students was positively correlated with depression. These findings were mirrored by Rosen et al. (2013), who found that participants who spent more time online and those who performed more Facebook image management evidenced more clinical symptoms of major depression. A study of American university students found that more intense Facebook use predicted increased loneliness (Lou et al., 2012). Also, according to Kalpidou et al. (2011), . Further, the same study found that college students who spent more time on Facebook reported having lower self-esteem than those who spent less time.
Selfhout et al. (2009) explored the idea that the quality of social media interactions was a better predictor of mental wellness than general social media use. They found that adolescents who reported low friendship quality and high frequencies of social use of online media (talking to friends, messaging, etc) at Time 1 were less likely to be depressed at Time 2. Conversely, those with low friendship quality who used social media primarily for passive use at Time 1 were more likely to be depressed and socially anxious at Time 2. Davila (2012) also explored this idea: In examining the social networking behaviors of 334 undergraduate students, he found that more negative and less positive interactions on social networking sites were associated with greater depressive symptoms. Kraut et al. (1998) and Shaw and Gant (2002) also gave evidence for an inverse association between Internet use and depression, suggesting that possibly more social forms of Internet use like chatting and gaming reduce the risk of depression.