Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress
There are ample grounds that tie social media use to negative mental health outcomes, including stress, loneliness, anxiety, and depression (see Berryman, Ferguson and Negy 2018; Hunt et al. 2018). Often, evidence indicates that factors such as addiction, cyberbullying, and exposure to traumatising...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-764442019-12-10T12:58:18Z Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress Ng, Jacobbina Jin Wen Sim, Xinyi Jung Jong Hyun School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology There are ample grounds that tie social media use to negative mental health outcomes, including stress, loneliness, anxiety, and depression (see Berryman, Ferguson and Negy 2018; Hunt et al. 2018). Often, evidence indicates that factors such as addiction, cyberbullying, and exposure to traumatising content mediate the relationship between social media use and negative mental health consequences. Here, we draw on the stress process model to examine the relationship between real-ideal self-discrepancy and psychological distress (depression and anxiety) through the three moderators (social comparison, contingent self-esteem and self-efficacy). Results show that self-discrepancy is positively associated with both depression and anxiety. However, interestingly, the moderators are only significant between self-discrepancy and depression, but not anxiety. Keywords: stress process model, self-discrepancy, social comparison, contingent self-esteem, self-efficacy, depression, anxiety Bachelor of Arts in Sociology 2019-03-09T12:39:19Z 2019-03-09T12:39:19Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76444 en 39 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Sociology Ng, Jacobbina Jin Wen Sim, Xinyi Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
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There are ample grounds that tie social media use to negative mental health outcomes, including stress, loneliness, anxiety, and depression (see Berryman, Ferguson and Negy 2018; Hunt et al. 2018). Often, evidence indicates that factors such as addiction, cyberbullying, and exposure to traumatising content mediate the relationship between social media use and negative mental health consequences. Here, we draw on the stress process model to examine the relationship between real-ideal self-discrepancy and psychological distress (depression and anxiety) through the three moderators (social comparison, contingent self-esteem and self-efficacy). Results show that self-discrepancy is positively associated with both depression and anxiety. However, interestingly, the moderators are only significant between self-discrepancy and depression, but not anxiety.
Keywords: stress process model, self-discrepancy, social comparison, contingent self-esteem, self-efficacy, depression, anxiety |
author2 |
Jung Jong Hyun |
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Jung Jong Hyun Ng, Jacobbina Jin Wen Sim, Xinyi |
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Final Year Project |
author |
Ng, Jacobbina Jin Wen Sim, Xinyi |
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Ng, Jacobbina Jin Wen |
title |
Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
title_short |
Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
title_full |
Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
title_fullStr |
Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
title_full_unstemmed |
Stress process model : young adults on Instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
title_sort |
stress process model : young adults on instagram, perceived self-discrepancy and psychological distress |
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2019 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76444 |
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1681040314339426304 |