This brief report presents an innovative method for capturing the content of adolescents’ electronic communication on handheld devices: text messaging, email, and Instant Messaging. In an ongoing longitudinal study, adolescents were provided with BlackBerry devices with service plans paid by the investigators, and use of text messaging was examined when participants were 15 years old and in the 10th grade (N=175, 81 girls). BlackBerries are configured so that the content of all text messages, email messages, and Instant Messages is saved to a secure server and organized in a highly secure, searchable, online archive. This paper describes the technology used to devise this method and ethical considerations. Evidence for validity is presented, including information on use of text messaging to show that participants used these devices heavily and frequencies of profane and sexual language in a two-day sample of text messaging to demonstrate that they were communicating openly.
In this naturalistic study of adolescents’ text messaging,
participants (N = 172, 81 girls, age 14) were given BlackBerry
devices configured to save their text messages to a secure archive for coding.
Two, 2-day transcripts collected four months apart within the same academic year
were microcoded for content. Results showed that most text message utterances
were positive or neutral, and that adolescents sent text messages primarily to
peers and to romantic partners. Only a few sex differences emerged. Frequency of
text messages containing negative talk positively predicted overall
internalizing symptoms and anxious depression. Text messaging about sex was
positively associated with overall internalizing and somatic complaints for
girls, but not for boys.
The recent article by Stephen T. Black (1993) comparing genuine suicide notes with simulated notes is examined here. This article corrected a sampling error made in the original study by E. S. Shneidman and N. Farberow (1957), but Black's design suffers from theoretical and methodological problems that render it uninterpretable: First, no theoretical background is elaborated, and no hypotheses are offered. Second, no constructs are operationalized, and no predictions are tested. In the present article, the operational design is critiqued, and then it is suggested that the study of suicide notes in this fashion should cease.
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