Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model

We examined the predictive relations of social media and smartphone use to body esteem in female adolescents and the mechanism that underlies these relations. As a result of frequent social media and smartphone use, adolescents are continually exposed to appearance-related media content. This likely...

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Main Authors: YANG, Hwajin, WANG, Jiaqi Joy, TNG, Yue Qi Germaine, YANG, Sujin
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Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2020
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3236
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4493/viewcontent/2020children_07_00148YangetalBodyesteem_pvoa.pdf
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spelling sg-smu-ink.soss_research-44932021-12-16T02:57:19Z Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model YANG, Hwajin WANG, Jiaqi Joy TNG, Yue Qi Germaine YANG, Sujin We examined the predictive relations of social media and smartphone use to body esteem in female adolescents and the mechanism that underlies these relations. As a result of frequent social media and smartphone use, adolescents are continually exposed to appearance-related media content. This likely reinforces a thin ideal and fosters appearance-based comparison and increases fear of external evaluation. Hence, we investigated a cognitive-affective framework in which the associations of social media and smartphone use with body esteem are serially mediated by cognitive internalization of an ideal body image, appearance comparisons, and social appearance anxiety. By testing female adolescents (N = 100) aged 13 to 18, we found that excessive social media use leads to unhealthy body esteem via intensified cognitive internalization, which aggravates appearance comparisons and anxiety regarding negative appearance evaluation. Further, we found that screen time for specific smartphone activities also harmed body esteem, independent of social media use. However, overall smartphone screen time did not affect body esteem when social media use was taken into consideration. Our findings underscore the multifactor mechanism that elucidates the negative impacts of social media and smartphone activities on body esteem in female adolescents, who are developmentally susceptible to poor body esteem. 2020-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3236 info:doi/10.3390/children7090148 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4493/viewcontent/2020children_07_00148YangetalBodyesteem_pvoa.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University social media and smartphone use body esteem internalization social comparison social appearance anxiety Gender and Sexuality Social Psychology
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic social media and smartphone use
body esteem
internalization
social comparison
social appearance anxiety
Gender and Sexuality
Social Psychology
spellingShingle social media and smartphone use
body esteem
internalization
social comparison
social appearance anxiety
Gender and Sexuality
Social Psychology
YANG, Hwajin
WANG, Jiaqi Joy
TNG, Yue Qi Germaine
YANG, Sujin
Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
description We examined the predictive relations of social media and smartphone use to body esteem in female adolescents and the mechanism that underlies these relations. As a result of frequent social media and smartphone use, adolescents are continually exposed to appearance-related media content. This likely reinforces a thin ideal and fosters appearance-based comparison and increases fear of external evaluation. Hence, we investigated a cognitive-affective framework in which the associations of social media and smartphone use with body esteem are serially mediated by cognitive internalization of an ideal body image, appearance comparisons, and social appearance anxiety. By testing female adolescents (N = 100) aged 13 to 18, we found that excessive social media use leads to unhealthy body esteem via intensified cognitive internalization, which aggravates appearance comparisons and anxiety regarding negative appearance evaluation. Further, we found that screen time for specific smartphone activities also harmed body esteem, independent of social media use. However, overall smartphone screen time did not affect body esteem when social media use was taken into consideration. Our findings underscore the multifactor mechanism that elucidates the negative impacts of social media and smartphone activities on body esteem in female adolescents, who are developmentally susceptible to poor body esteem.
format text
author YANG, Hwajin
WANG, Jiaqi Joy
TNG, Yue Qi Germaine
YANG, Sujin
author_facet YANG, Hwajin
WANG, Jiaqi Joy
TNG, Yue Qi Germaine
YANG, Sujin
author_sort YANG, Hwajin
title Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
title_short Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
title_full Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
title_fullStr Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
title_full_unstemmed Effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: Testing a cognitive and affective model
title_sort effects of social media and smartphone use on body esteem in female adolescents: testing a cognitive and affective model
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2020
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3236
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4493/viewcontent/2020children_07_00148YangetalBodyesteem_pvoa.pdf
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