Adolescents’ real-time social and affective experiences of online and face-to-face interactions

Much disagreement exists surrounding the relationship between digital communication and adolescent well-being. Micro-level insight into the direct effect of online interaction on affective experiences in daily life is crucial to advancing this discussion. In this registered study, we used experience...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computers in human behavior 2022-04, Vol.129, p.107159, Article 107159
Hauptverfasser: Achterhof, Robin, Kirtley, Olivia J., Schneider, Maude, Hagemann, Noëmi, Hermans, Karlijn S.F.M., Hiekkaranta, Anu P., Lecei, Aleksandra, Lafit, Ginette, Myin-Germeys, Inez
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container_start_page 107159
container_title Computers in human behavior
container_volume 129
creator Achterhof, Robin
Kirtley, Olivia J.
Schneider, Maude
Hagemann, Noëmi
Hermans, Karlijn S.F.M.
Hiekkaranta, Anu P.
Lecei, Aleksandra
Lafit, Ginette
Myin-Germeys, Inez
description Much disagreement exists surrounding the relationship between digital communication and adolescent well-being. Micro-level insight into the direct effect of online interaction on affective experiences in daily life is crucial to advancing this discussion. In this registered study, we used experience sampling in 1705 general-population adolescents (n = 43.226 total observations) to examine different emotional and social experiences, at the moment they engage in online and face-to-face social interactions. Adolescents reported significantly less positive affect when alone compared to when interacting online (B(SE) = -0.15 (0.04), p = .001), but significantly more positive affect (B(SE) = 0.12 (0.04), p 
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subjects Adolescence
Daily life
Digital communication
Experience sampling
Social factors
Teenagers
Well-being
title Adolescents’ real-time social and affective experiences of online and face-to-face interactions
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