Discover Yahoo! With Your Friends

Explore news, videos, and much more based on what your friends are reading and watching. Publish your own activity and retain full control.

To get started, first

YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Facebook With Care: Social Networking Site Can Hurt Self-Esteem

    Facebook's initial public offering of stock is likely to make a lot of developers and designers of the site very wealthy. But for many users, frequent Facebooking may not be so beneficial.

    According to three new studies, Facebook can be tough on mental health, offering an all-too-alluring medium for social comparison and ill-advised status updates. And while adding a friend on the social networking site can make people feel cheery and connected, having a lot of friends is associated with feeling worse about one's own life.

    The thread running through these findings is not that Facebook itself is harmful, but that it provides a place for people to indulge in self-destructive behavior, such as trumpeting their own weaknesses or comparing their achievements with those of others.

    The status (update) trap

    Take status updates. Most people know that their Facebook friends tend to craft these online-wall memos on what they're up to in a way that puts their lives in the best light, said Mudra Mukesh, a doctoral candidate in marketing at the Instituto de Empresa in Madrid. But when it comes down to actually using the site, reading other people's status updates still makes Facebookers feel worse. [Facebook's Global Reach (Infographic)]

    In research presented earlier this month at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychologists (SPSP) in San Diego, Mukesh found that when people think about the last time someone asked to friend them on Facebook, they get a boost in feelings of belonging and social connectedness ­— the kind of feeling that makes people "sing 'Kumbaya,'" Mukesh told LiveScience.

    But once you've collected all those friends, viewing their status updates is a downer, Mukesh said. When asked how they felt about their place in life and their achievements, people with lots of Facebook friends gave themselves lower marks if they'd just viewed their friends' status updates, compared with people who hadn't recently surfed the site.

    For people with just a few friends, viewing status updates wasn't a problem.

    "A small number of friends means a low probability of viewing others showing off," Mukesh said. For people with lots of friends, though, the Facebook Newsfeed turns into a parade of good news about other people's live: promotions, engagements, weddings and new babies. Even if someone knows intellectually that people use Facebook to show off, Mukesh said, all of this information can make them feel worse about their own achievements or lack thereof. [10 Technologies That Will Transform Your Life]

    (In Mukesh's study, 354 friends was the cut-off point for when participants started to feel bad about viewing status updates. But that's not a universal number, she cautioned, just the number that applied given the statistics of her sample.)

    Comparisons and competitions

    In another study presented at the SPSP conference, researchers at the University of Houston surveyed college students and found that time spent on Facebook is linked to depressive symptoms. That doesn't mean Facebook causes depression, but that depressed feelings and lots of Facebooking tend to go hand in hand, for whatever reason. For young men, the study found, the link seemed to be a tendency to compare oneself with others.

    "It appears as if males, when they socially compare themselves on Facebook, they tend to experience depression systems," study researcher and University of Houston doctoral student Mai-Ly Nguyen told LiveScience.

    In this case, Facebook seems to be a new medium for men to compete with one another, Nguyen said. Outside the digital realm, men often compare themselves with one another, she said. It may be that women more often use the site to connect with one another and men to compete with one another.

    Woe is me

    Some people, however, don't use their Facebook status updates to pump themselves up. Instead, they complain.

    People with low self-esteem view Facebook as a safer place to express themselves than in face-to-face interactions, according to new research published in the March issue of the journal of Psychological Science. All this venting may actually alienate friends.

    Researchers led by Amanda Forest of the University of Waterloo in Ontario collected recent status updates from 117 participants who also reported their average time spent on Facebook and answered questions to reveal their self-esteem levels. Some statuses were chipper, such as "[Poster] is lucky to have such terrific friends and is looking forward to a great day tomorrow!" Others wallowed in bad news: "[Poster] is upset b/c her phone got stolen :@."

    Next, the researchers had another group of participants read the status updates and rate how much they liked the person who wrote each. Unsurprisingly, people responded more positively to posters whose updates were positive.

    Of course, you'd expect friends to be a little more caring than strangers. So the researchers set up another experiment in which they collected recent status updates from 98 undergraduates and also asked the students to submit the number of likes and number of comments on each.

    It turned out that for users with high self-esteem, a negative post garnered more responses than a positive one, presumably because those people's friends were concerned about the out-of-character update. For users with low self-esteem, though, negative posts seemed to exhaust friends: They got few responses.

    "Indeed, [low-self-esteem users'] friends rewarded their posts with more validation and attention the more positive they were, perhaps trying to encourage this atypical behavior," Forest and her colleagues wrote.

    Forgoing Facebook?

    The takeaway of all this work is not to dump your Facebook account — the site has its benefits, some psychological. But researchers suggest being mindful about your online social life, just as most people are about friends in the real world.

    "You have to be careful," said University of Houston psychologist Linda Acitelli, who advised Nguyen on the social comparison study. "I think parents, especially if they have teenage kids, need to be monitoring how much time they spend on Facebook."

    Because Facebook provides more opportunities to peer into others' lives, it helps to keep Facebook pitfalls in mind, according to the Instituto de Empresa's Mukesh. She found that reminding people in the moment of what they already know ­— that people brag on Facebook — can ease the self-recriminations that come with hearing about friends' accomplishments.

    "At the end of the day, have more friends, there's no problem with that. Just be sure to remember that when you start feeling crappy about your life, think about the fact that you have a large number of friends and that increases your probability of viewing more ostentatious information," Mukesh said. "So, it's not you, it's them."

    You can follow LiveScience senior writer Stephanie Pappas on Twitter @sipappas. Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescience and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    31 comments

    • antheap  •  3 months ago
      I feel sorry for those who use FB to toot their own horn.
    • Kara  •  Ashburn, United States  •  3 months ago
      The entertainment value of FB is priceless. I know people who use it to brag about themselves ad nauseum and others who feel the need to post every little thing they do. I know I can count on a good laugh anytime I sign in.
      • brad k 3 months ago
        Wow, you seem to have a rather boring life if FB is the height of your entertainment.
    • dh1  •  Elmhurst, United States  •  3 months ago
      oh stop it............next thing you know, facebook will be another bogus murder defense!....people need to get a grip!
    • Gown Maven  •  Ocean Springs, United States  •  3 months ago
      The only reason I mess with Facebook is to keep up with my grandchildren. I couldn't care less about what most people are doing. It's really a site for teenagers who are interested in the mundane activities of friends. Most of the adults who spend a lot of time perusing the site don't have much of a life and are socially inept.
      • brad k 3 months ago
        It was originally a site for college students and college faculty. Then, it became all about grandkids and #$%$ When they allowed "teenagers" and their parents on facebook, it started sucking and hasn't gotten better since. Make sure you click on Facebook advertising, so Mark Zuckernerd can cash in on your behalf! Suckers!
    • Glen Goin  •  Brooklyn, United States  •  3 months ago
      I have absolutely no interest whatsoever in this bogus nonsense. It sucks.
    • jking  •  3 months ago
      "It appears as if males, when they socially compare themselves on Facebook, they tend to experience depression systems," study researcher and University of Houston doctoral student Mai-Ly Nguyen told LiveScience."

      I'll assume the student meant "symptoms" and not "systems". Does anyone actually read these articles before they are put online?
    • Reason  •  3 months ago
      Texting, social media, etc. are turning people into social misfits that cannot have a "normal", real-time conversation with another human being without the use of a smart phone, PC, etc., and it's disgusting.
    • JJ  •  3 months ago
      Honestly,when I read my friends' statuses I feel entertained...it's just that I don't have people that I dislike as contacts
    • Brian  •  3 months ago
      Don't take it seriously. I only have 3 and 1/2 friends!
    • Gee,You Are Special  •  Sydney, Australia  •  3 months ago
      Honestly? I couldn't care less that my friend from HS (who I haven't seen in 20+ and lives clear across the country) is having spaghetti and meatballs tonight with sauce especially brought in from Italy by the head of the mafia.Why? Because I have a life and I don't need to live my life through someone elses.
    • David  •  3 months ago
      The weak minded simps who need FB deserve whatever they get.
    • Jimmy  •  Richardson, United States  •  3 months ago
      Facebook full of Lonely people and people with their self estem about a inch off the ground.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Santa Barbara, United States  •  3 months ago
      facebook is the new high school yearbook. the more people that "sign it", the 'cooler' you think you are. let's face the facts: where is your yearbook now? lost? the attic? thrown away? in the long term, facebook will be the same way since people are fickle and tend to forget.
      • kofoo11 3 months ago
        people tend to forget, that's true, especially if they don't even know
    • Dld  •  3 months ago
      What really depresses me is reading actual works of great men of past centuries. When I read Robert Hooke's dissertation on microscopy or Michael Faraday's writings on electrical theory, I realize how ignorant and dull I am - in spite of being well-schooled in the technologies. I only regurgitate and apply what giants conceived and produced, and I'm not alone.

      The list is long indeed of things for which I take credit without attributing to previous generations that which made any small contribution from me possible.
      • oblivion 3 months ago
        elegant point, but there was a time for epic discoveries because there was so much that an individual could discover. Now it takes teams of scientists utilizing vast amounts of technology to distill ever smaller bits of unknown information.
      • USA 3 months ago
        How about Newton's theory of gravitation? How do you come up with that without a cyclotron?
      • Brian 3 months ago
        Come on, remember what we were told in college. We're all standing on the shoulders of giants.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      Deleted my facebook account. Never been happier.
    • Liberals are cancer  •  3 months ago
      LOL... I laugh at people that use face book.... it's only for the weak....
    • Mike  •  Joplin, United States  •  3 months ago
      If you're too old to care and too rich to scare, the opinion of others has little affect on your self esteem.
    • W.  •  Chicago, United States  •  3 months ago
      People on FB don't have real friends. Real friends want to know HOW you're doing, not WHAT you're doing every second.
    • Sunset  •  Batesville, United States  •  3 months ago
      "Self " is the whole problem to begin with. To esteem self is a worldly teaching.It's wrong!
    • Vernon  •  Chicago, United States  •  3 months ago
      I only updated my FB a few times: When I won the Gold at the Olympics, received my Nobel Prize in Physics, made my first billion and when I tunred down Angelina Jolie for a date. Most of my "friends" are losers so they enjoy reading my updates a lot.
    [ [ [['xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 11]], '27013743', '0' ], [ [['keyword', 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999]], 'videoID', '1', 'overwrite-pre-description', 'overwrite-link-string', 'overwrite-link-url' ] ]
    Search

    News for You

    • Australian tycoon 'is world's richest woman'
      Australian tycoon 'is world's richest woman'

      Australia's richest person Gina Rinehart has eclipsed Wal-Mart heiress Christy Walton to become the world's wealthiest woman, according to an annual index by Business Review Weekly.

    • Iran navy saves US freighter from pirates: report
      Iran navy saves US freighter from pirates: report

      Iran's navy said Thursday it saved an American-flagged cargo ship that was being attacked by pirates in the Gulf of Oman.

    • Donald Driver & Peta Murgatroyd Win Dancing With The Stars
      Donald Driver & Peta Murgatroyd Win Dancing With The Stars

      They called it "the most competitive season" ever on "Dancing with the Stars," but on Tuesday night, just one pair was good enough for Season 14 mirrorball glory.

    • Chinese couple bury woman alive, sparking outrage

      BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese police have arrested a young couple who buried an old woman alive believing she was dead after their car hit the 68-year-old, newspapers said on Thursday, in a case which has sparked outrage over declining public morality. The couple had been at an all-night karaoke session when they hit the woman while driving in the early hours of the morning in the wealthy eastern province of Zhejiang last month, the official China Daily said. "A witness said he heard someone crying …

    • American Idol Finale Recap: Phillip Phillips & Jessica Sanchez Battle It Out
      American Idol Finale Recap: Phillip Phillips & Jessica Sanchez Battle It Out

      "American Idol" returned to the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live on Tuesday as Jessica Sanchez and Phillip Phillips battled it out for the title. The two contenders couldn't have been more different - Jessica Sanchez, the 16-year-old with the big, big voice, and Phillip Phillips, the 21-year-old bashful singer with a soulful edge. Here's how the finale went down:

    • US climber describes deadly congestion on Everest
      US climber describes deadly congestion on Everest

      An American adventurer who helped rescue four climbers from Mount Everest last weekend has told of how a crowded push for the summit and bad weather created deadly conditions for mountaineers.

    • Harper government introduces new employment insurance rules

      Labour minister Diane Finlay announced an overhaul of the employment insurance system, Thursday morning. The Globe and Mail is reporting that the new rules will mean less generous terms for frequent users of EI, while giving Canadians who rarely use the program … Continue reading →