| Literature DB >> 23967061 |
Ethan Kross1, Philippe Verduyn, Emre Demiralp, Jiyoung Park, David Seungjae Lee, Natalie Lin, Holly Shablack, John Jonides, Oscar Ybarra.
Abstract
Over 500 million people interact daily with Facebook. Yet, whether Facebook use influences subjective well-being over time is unknown. We addressed this issue using experience-sampling, the most reliable method for measuring in-vivo behavior and psychological experience. We text-messaged people five times per day for two-weeks to examine how Facebook use influences the two components of subjective well-being: how people feel moment-to-moment and how satisfied they are with their lives. Our results indicate that Facebook use predicts negative shifts on both of these variables over time. The more people used Facebook at one time point, the worse they felt the next time we text-messaged them; the more they used Facebook over two-weeks, the more their life satisfaction levels declined over time. Interacting with other people "directly" did not predict these negative outcomes. They were also not moderated by the size of people's Facebook networks, their perceived supportiveness, motivation for using Facebook, gender, loneliness, self-esteem, or depression. On the surface, Facebook provides an invaluable resource for fulfilling the basic human need for social connection. Rather than enhancing well-being, however, these findings suggest that Facebook may undermine it.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23967061 PMCID: PMC3743827 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Within-person and between-person zero-order correlations.
| Experience-sampled variables | Pre/post experience sampling | ||||||
| Affect | Worry | Loneliness | Facebook use | Direct contact | Pre life satisfaction | Post life satisfaction | |
| Affect | – | .53 | .50 | .14 | −.29 | – | – |
| Worry | .77 | – | .37 | .17 | −.23 | – | – |
| Loneliness | .68 | .66 | – | .22 | −.40 | – | – |
| Facebook Use | .07 | .13 | .22 | – | −.24 | – | – |
| Direct Contact | −.28 | −.09 | −.39 | .26 | – | – | – |
| Pre Life Satisfaction | −.55 | −.41 | −.40 | −.05 | .29 | – | – |
| Post Life Satisfaction | −.66 | −.51 | −.48 | −.18 | .23 | .86 | – |
Note. Correlations above the dashed diagonal line represent within-person correlations obtained from multi-level analyses. Correlations below the dashed diagonal line represent between-person correlations.
p<.05.
p<.01.
p<.001.
Figure 1Facebook use predicts declines in affect and life satisfaction over time.
Interacting with Facebook during one time period (Time1–2) leads people to feel worse later on during the same day (T2) controlling for how they felt initially (T1); values are regression weights from multilevel analyses (Panel A). Average Facebook use over the course of the 14-day experience-sampling period predicts decreases in life satisfaction over time; values are standardized regression weights from OLS regression analysis (Panel B). *p<.05, ** p<.01, ***p<.001.