articleJournal of Computer-Mediated CommunicationJul 1, 2016BRONZE OA

The Relationship Between Facebook Use and Well-Being Depends on Communication Type and Tie Strength

Meta (Israel) · Carnegie Mellon University

Indexed incrossrefdoaj

Abstract

An extensive literature shows that social relationships influence psychological well-being, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We test predictions about online interactions and well-being made by theories of belongingness, relationship maintenance, relational investment, social support, and social comparison. An opt-in panel study of 1,910 Facebook users linked self-reported measures of well-being to counts of respondents' Facebook activities from server logs. Specific uses of the site were associated with improvements in well-being: Receiving targeted, composed communication from strong ties was associated with improvements in well-being while viewing friends' wide-audience broadcasts and receiving…

Citation impact

538
total citations
FWCI
154.58
Percentile
100%
References
54
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Type (biology)
  • Psychology
  • Social psychology
  • Geology
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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