Social Media And Growing Mental Health Issues In Teens
If you have noticed that your teen becomes depressed and/or more anxious after perusing through their social media feeds, you aren't just imagining things. Research has shown an alarming 70% spike in rates of depression and anxiety in teens, which has been linked to social media. While this information may be surprising to parents who aren't heavy social media users, researchers explained that the carefully curated images (both actual images and words) presented on social media caused teens a high amount of anxiety and depression when the teens compared their regular lives with the cultivated lives displayed on social media. Even with intensive mental health treatment, one of the best things parents can do for anxious and depressed teens is to help their teens cut back on time spent on social media. There have also been profoundly troubling stories which have highlighted how social media has been used to torment children and teens to the point where they take their own lives. Snapchat has been one of the particularly highlighted methods of harassment, as the proof of bullying disappears.Risky Behaviors Promoted In Teens Via Social Media
Another study engaged in discovering how peer pressure and social media worked together. While scanning the neural responses of the teens' brain with a fMRI, the researchers uncovered a number of uncomfortable links between social media and a teen's neural response.- The area of the brain which promotes behavioral control was less active after teens viewed pictures of "risky" things such as someone holding marijuana, alcohol, provocatively dressed adolescents of both genders.
- Teens are more likely to "like" an image if there are plenty of likes already, regardless of content, following along with the virtual peer pressure.
- As the researchers included pictures from the participating teens' personal social media contributions, the researchers were able to observe the high activity response in the brain's reward center if a teen noticed that their image had many "likes."
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