Passive Facebook usage undermines affective well-being: Experimental and longitudinal evidence.
KU Leuven · University of Michigan
Abstract
Prior research indicates that Facebook usage predicts declines in subjective well-being over time. How does this come about? We examined this issue in 2 studies using experimental and field methods. In Study 1, cueing people in the laboratory to use Facebook passively (rather than actively) led to declines in affective well-being over time. Study 2 replicated these findings in the field using experience-sampling techniques. It also demonstrated how passive Facebook usage leads to declines in affective well-being: by increasing envy. Critically, the relationship between passive Facebook usage and changes in affective well-being remained significant when controlling for active Facebook use, non-Facebook online…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 158.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 33
Authors
9Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Experience sampling method
- Longitudinal field
- Cyberpsychology
- Well-being
- Social psychology
- Field (mathematics)
- Social comparison theory