The Free Press Journal

Smartphone­s cause of sadness among teens

- AGENCIES

Teenagers who are habitually glued to their smartphone­s are more likely to be unhappier than their peers, a study has found. Researcher­s from the University of Georgia in the US, analysed data from a survey of over a million US teens.

The survey asked students questions about how often they spent time on their phones, tablets and computers, as well as questions about their in-the-flesh social interactio­ns and their overall happiness.

On average, they found that teens who spent more time in front of screen devices – playing computer games, using social media, texting and video chatting – were less happy than those who invested more time in non-screen activities like sports, reading newspapers and magazines, and face-to-face social interactio­n.

Researcher­s believe this screen time is driving unhappines­s rather than the other way around. “Although this study can't show causation, several other studies have shown that more social media use leads to unhappines­s, but unhappines­s does not lead to more social media use,” said Jean M Twenge, professor at San Diego State University in the US.

Total screen abstinence does not lead to happiness either, Twenge found. The happiest teens used digital media a little less than an hour per day. However, after a daily hour of screen time, unhappines­s rises steadily along with increasing screen time, according to the study published in the journal Emotion.

Specifical­ly, young people’s life satisfacti­on, self- esteem and happiness plummeted after 2012. That is the year that the percentage of Americans who owned a smartphone rose above 50 per cent, Twenge said.

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