| Literature DB >> 33967899 |
Lucía Magis-Weinberg1, Ahna Ballonoff Suleiman2, Ronald E Dahl1,3.
Abstract
The rapidly expanding universe of information, media, and learning experiences available through digital technology is creating unique opportunities and vulnerabilities for children and adolescents. These issues are particularly salient during the developmental window at the transition from childhood into adolescence. This period of early adolescence is a time of formative social and emotional learning experiences that can shape identity development in both healthy and unhealthy ways. Increasingly, many of these foundational learning experiences are occurring in on-line digital environments. These expanding vulnerabilities and opportunities are being further amplified for young adolescents growing up in low resourced settings around the world. Cultural and contextual factors influence access, use, and appropriation of digital technology. Further, neurobehavioral changes associated with the onset of puberty often coincide with entry into social media and more autonomous use of technology. In low-and-middle-income countries (LMICs), disparities in access, use, and appropriation of digital media can amplify prevailing economic gaps, and compound gender inequalities during early adolescence. In LMICs, adolescents are often the early adopters of mobile technology and social media platforms. While the impact of social media on the well-being, particularly mental health, of young adolescents has been a focus of research in high-income countries (HICs), much less is known about the impacts of social media use on young adolescents in LMICs. In this paper, we review what is known about the interaction between digital media and early adolescent development. We highlight crucial gaps in the evidence in LMICs; and describe some hypotheses and areas for future research to address these compelling issues.Entities:
Keywords: Global South; LMICs; digital media; social media; very young adolescents
Year: 2021 PMID: 33967899 PMCID: PMC8097039 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.632713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Examples of how specific aspects of social emotional learning & identity development in early adolescence create risks and/or opportunities.
| Increased sensitivity to social evaluative feedback | • Learning to navigate increasingly complex social environments | • Cybervictimization and digital drama | • Social connection |
| Increased proclivity for social exploration and social risk taking | Self/other learning Identity formation | • Exposure to negative role models | • Exposure to positive role models |
| Increased desire for independence and autonomy | • Emerging capacities of cognitive control (particularly under conditions of strong emotion) | • Unsupervised and unmediated time online due to limited parental skills and resources might lead to increased exposure to harmful content | • Openness to parental mediation (relative to older adolescents) |
LMICs considerations that apply broadly to digital media use in VYA.
| • Digital divides in use, access and appropriation exacerbate existing disparities (e.g., gender, socioeconomics, educational attainment) |
Dynamic physical and brain maturation contribute to changes in learning and cognitive, emotional, and social, and identity development. Coupled with behavioral and contextual changes, early adolescence is a critical time of heightened sensitivity to information related to the self- and other, increasing the drive for social rewards and sensitivity to social evaluation (Dahl et al., .
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Glossary.
| High income countries (HICs) | Countries with a gross national income per capita of $12, 536 or more in 2019 (World Bank Atlas method) |
| Low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) | Countries with a gross national income lower than $12, 536 per capita (Threshold between low and middle income: $1,036) |
| Global south | LMICs located in Africa, Asia, Oceania, Latin America, and the Caribbean Mahler, |
| Low-resource settings | Settings characterized by relative lower funds than other settings, but not necessarily pertaining to the Global south |
| Digital media | Digitized content that can be shared through online networks |
| Social media | Subset of digital media, related to the online platforms that allow people to create and share information with others and establish social networks Kross et al., |
| Adolescence | Period of life between 10 and 24 Sawyer et al., |
| Early adolescence | Generally understood as the subset of adolescent years between 10 and 14 years of age (WHO), 10–12 years of age (NASEM), characterized by the onset of puberty (Note: Early adolescence might also be used to refer to those adolescents who reach puberty earlier than their peers) |
| Very young adolescents | Sometimes used as synonymous with early adolescence, can also include pre-adolescents (8–12 years of age), some overlap with “tweens” |