2018
DOI: 10.1080/10410236.2017.1422101
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Social Media Use, Social Media Stress, and Sleep: Examining Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Relationships in Adolescents

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Cited by 93 publications
(103 citation statements)
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References 37 publications
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“…For nomophobia, supporting our hypothesis H1, the results showed that more stress than usual was associated with more nomophobia than usual at T1 (correlations at T2 & T3 represent error-correlations and should not be interpreted, see van der Schuur et al, 2018 ). Thus, when people are stressed their fear of not being able to use their smartphone at the same time seems to be high.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
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“…For nomophobia, supporting our hypothesis H1, the results showed that more stress than usual was associated with more nomophobia than usual at T1 (correlations at T2 & T3 represent error-correlations and should not be interpreted, see van der Schuur et al, 2018 ). Thus, when people are stressed their fear of not being able to use their smartphone at the same time seems to be high.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 79%
“…Due to the complexity of our models, using latent variables was not feasible for the variables stress and nomophobia. We thus decided to use mean indices for these measures following previous studies applying RI-CPLMs (see van der Schuur et al, 2018 ). For all three models, we used complete datasets based on a listwise deletion for the two subsamples (smartphone users only for stress and nomophobia & Facebook users only for stress and active respectively passive Facebook use).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Currently, there is an ongoing debate among communication scholars concerning the mediatization of everyday life and how it might increase experienced stress, considering that it has led to phenomena like a growing "fear of missing out," technostress, information overload, and permanent communication pressure (e.g., Halfmann & Rieger, 2019;Reinecke et al, 2017;Van der Schuur et al, 2019). However, contrary to frequent discussions, in addition to causing stress, media can be easily used for coping with stress in everyday life.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although mobile devices allow users to perform a variety of tasks quickly, easily, and effectively, they can (in extreme cases) also lead to serious medical and physical problems. For instance, from a physical point of view, these problems include poor physical fitness (Guthold et al 2020;Lepp et al 2015;Rebold et al 2016), sleep deprivation (van der Schuur et al 2019), excessive exposure to radiation (Stevens and Egger 2017), "screen dermatitis" (Corazza et al 2016), tumors (Kim et al 2016;Heo et al 2017), and infertility (Belyaev et al 2015). Mobile devices can also interfere with driving safety and cause serious accidents (International Telecommunication Union 2019).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%