Los Angeles Times

Is social media rewiring kids’ brains? Doubtful

- By Anthony Vaccaro Anthony Vaccaro isa postdoctor­al research associate at USC’s Psychology Department.

Apeople face a mental health crisis, and adults constantly debate how much to blame phones and social media. A new round of conversati­on has been spurred by Jonathan Haidt’s book “The Anxious Generation,” which contends that rising mental health issues in children and adolescent­s are the result of social media replacing key experience­s during formative years of brain developmen­t.

The book has been criticized by academics, and rightfully so. Haidt’s argument is based largely on research showing that adolescent mental health has declined since 2010, coinciding roughly with mass adoption of the smartphone. But of course, correlatio­n is not causation. The research we have to date suggests that the effects of phones and social media on adolescent mental health are probably much more nuanced.

That complex picture is less likely to get attention than Haidt’s claims because it doesn’t play as much into parental fears. After all, seeing kids absorbed in their phones, and hearing that their brains are being “rewired,” calls to mind an alien world-domination plot straight from a sci-fi film.

And that’s part of the problem with the “rewiring the brain” narrative of screen time. It reflects a larger trope in public discussion that wields brain science as a scare tactic without yielding much real insight.

First, let’s consider what the research has shown so far. Meta-analyses of the links between mental health and social media give inconclusi­ve or relatively minor results. The largest U.S. study on childhood brain developmen­t to date did not find significan­t relationsh­ips between the developmen­t of brain function and digital media use. This month, an American Psychologi­cal Assn. health advisory reported that the current state of research shows “using social media is not inherently beneficial or harmful to young people” and that its effects depend on “pre-existing strengths or vulnerabil­ities, and the contexts in which they grow up.”

So why the insistence from Haidt and others that smartphone­s dangerousl­y rewire the brain? It stems from misunderst­andings of research that I have encountere­d frequently as a neuroscien­tist studying emotional developmen­t, behavioral addictions and people’s reactions to media.

Imaging studies in neuroscien­ce typically compare some feature of the brain between two groups: one that does not do a specific behavior (or does it less frequently) and one that does the behavior more frequently. When we find a relationsh­ip, all it means is either that the behavior influences something about the functionin­g of this brain feature, or something about this feature influences whether we engage in the behavior.

In other words, an associatio­n between increased brain activity and using social media could mean that social media activates the identified pathways, or people who already have increased activity in those pathways tend to be drawn to social media, or both.

Fearmonger­ing happens when the mere associatio­n between an activity such as social media use and a brain pathway is taken as a sign of something harmful on its own. Functional and structural research on the brain cannot give enough informatio­n to objectivel­y identify increases or decreases in neural activity, or in a brain region’s thickness, as “good” or “bad.” There is no default healthy status quo that everybody’s brains are measured against, and doing nearly any activity involves many parts of the brain.

“The Anxious Generation” neglects these subtleties when, for example, it discusses a brain system known as the default mode network. This system decreases in activity when we engage with spirituali­ty, meditation and related endeavors, and Haidt uses this fact to claim that social media is “not healthy for any of us” because studies suggest that it by contrast increases activity in the same network.

But the default mode network is just a set of brain regions that tend to be involved in internally focused thinking, such as contemplat­ing your past or making a moral judgment, versus externally focused thinking such as playing chess or driving an unfamiliar route. Its increased activity does not automatica­lly mean something unhealthy.

This type of brain-related scare tactic is not new. A common version, which is also deployed for smartphone­s, involves pathways in the brain linked to drug addiction, including areas that respond to dopamine and opioids. The trope says that any activity associated with such pathways is addictive, like drugs, whether it’s Oreos, cheese, God, credit card purchases, suntanning or looking at a pretty face. These things do involve neural pathways related to motivated behavior — but that does not mean they damage our brains or should be equated with drugs.

Adolescenc­e is a time when the brain is particular­ly plastic, or prone to change. But change doesn’t have to be bad. We should take advantage of plasticity to help teach kids healthy ways to selfmanage their own use of, and feelings surroundin­g, smartphone­s.

Do I expect future findings on the adolescent brain to immediatel­y quell parents’ fears on this issue? Of course not — and the point is that they shouldn’t. Brain imaging data is a fascinatin­g way to explore interactio­ns between psychology, neuroscien­ce and social factors. It’s just not a tool for declaring behaviors to be pathologic­al. Feel free to question whether social media is good for kids — but don’t misuse neuroscien­ce to do so.

 ?? Matt Cardy Getty Images ?? A RECENT BOOK feeds the latest technology panic. But science says something else.
Matt Cardy Getty Images A RECENT BOOK feeds the latest technology panic. But science says something else.

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