How and Why Social Media Affect Subjective Well-Being: Multi-Site Use and Social Comparison as Predictors of Change Across Time

被引:0
|
作者
Derrick Wirtz
Amanda Tucker
Chloe Briggs
Alexander M. Schoemann
机构
[1] University of British Columbia,Department of Psychology
[2] East Carolina University,Department of Psychology
来源
Journal of Happiness Studies | 2021年 / 22卷
关键词
Subjective well-being; Positive affect; Negative affect; Social media; Social network sites; Experience sampling method;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
How and why does the widespread use of social media affect happiness? The present study examined whether the three components of subjective well-being—positive affect, negative affect, and life satisfaction—were impacted by use of three of the most popular social network sites in the U.S. (Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram), using the experience sampling method. Over 10 days, greater everyday use of social media resulted in lower subjective well-being—specifically, by increasing negative affective states rather than by decreasing positive states or life satisfaction—a pattern evident across all three social network sites. In evaluating why use of social media adversely impacted subjective well-being, social comparison was a strong predictor. Specifically, the more that participants reported comparing themselves to others while using social media, the less subjective well-being they subsequently experienced. In contrast, traditional, offline social interactions exerted the opposite (beneficial) effect on happiness: increasing positive affect and decreasing negative affect. The present study therefore demonstrates that ordinary, day-to-day use of social network sites adversely impacts subjective well-being over time, and further highlights the advantages of employing independent well-being measures and assessing the use of multiple sites.
引用
收藏
页码:1673 / 1691
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] How and Why Social Media Affect Subjective Well-Being: Multi-Site Use and Social Comparison as Predictors of Change Across Time
    Wirtz, Derrick
    Tucker, Amanda
    Briggs, Chloe
    Schoemann, Alexander M.
    JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES, 2021, 22 (04) : 1673 - 1691
  • [2] Why Does Social Class Affect Subjective Well-Being? The Role of Status and Power
    Yu, Siyu
    Blader, Steven L.
    PERSONALITY AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY BULLETIN, 2020, 46 (03) : 331 - 348
  • [3] Sensing Subjective Well-Being from Social Media
    Hao, Bibo
    Li, Lin
    Gao, Rui
    Li, Ang
    Zhu, Tingshao
    ACTIVE MEDIA TECHNOLOGY, AMT 2014, 2014, 8610 : 324 - +
  • [4] Abstinence from social media use, subjective well-being, stress, and loneliness
    Vally, Zahir
    D'Souza, Caroline G.
    PERSPECTIVES IN PSYCHIATRIC CARE, 2019, 55 (04) : 752 - 759
  • [5] Evaluating Individual Subjective Well-being via Social Media
    Wang, Yazhou
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCES IN MECHANICAL ENGINEERING AND INDUSTRIAL INFORMATICS (AMEII 2016), 2016, 73 : 859 - 864
  • [6] Subjective well-being and Social media use: Do personality traits moderate the impact of social comparison on Facebook?
    Gerson, Jennifer
    Plagnol, Anke C.
    Corr, Philip J.
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2016, 63 : 813 - 822
  • [7] THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN SOCIAL SUPPORT AND SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING ACROSS THE LIFESPAN
    Brajsa-Zganec, Andreja
    Kaliterna Lipovcan, Ljiljana
    Hanzec, Ivana
    DRUSTVENA ISTRAZIVANJA, 2018, 27 (01): : 47 - 65
  • [8] College students' social media use and communication network heterogeneity: Implications for social capital and subjective well-being
    Kim, Bumsoo
    Kim, Yonghwan
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2017, 73 : 620 - 628
  • [9] Is the social use of media for seeking connectedness or for avoiding social isolation? Mechanisms underlying media use and subjective well-being
    Ahn, Dohyun
    Shin, Dong-Hee
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2013, 29 (06) : 2453 - 2462
  • [10] Social Media and Subjective Well-Being: The Moderating Role of Personality Traits
    Alphenaar, Linda E. V.
    Shiner, Rebecca L.
    Arana, Clara Chavez
    Prinzie, Peter
    JOURNAL OF HAPPINESS STUDIES, 2025, 26 (04)