https://t.co/VOWAhXC6Ye #MKUltra never stopped. It expanded onto the general population. The MSM is designed to max out rage/fear, weaken your psyche, & rip from you everything that makes you an individual with the strength to stand against a tyrannic
@sTeamTraen @mc_hankins I reported both r and RR in this paper (paywalled, tho): https://t.co/1NYYAXM50I Basic conclusion: Relatively low r's in the same data showing RR's between 1.48 and 2.71. Measures similar to the JAMA paper I linked.
RT @KushlevPhD: 5. @jean_twenge and @wkeithcampbell show that Heavy users, those who spent 5+ a day on a digital screen—experienced the bi…
5. @jean_twenge and @wkeithcampbell show that Heavy users, those who spent 5+ a day on a digital screen—experienced the biggest detriments to well-being, including being twice as likely as light users to have attempted suicide. https://t.co/uRUP2xhuso
Menos de 1 hr de social media incrementa la felicidad. Comprobado. Así que todo con medida... Media Use Is Linked to Lower Psychological Well-Being https://t.co/mhnz55PfZw
Media Use Is Linked to Lower Psychological Well-Being: Evidence from Three Datasets. https://t.co/JINQmFlwOL
@ArinaBones2 @toddkashdan Different topic than trends over time in mental health ... but, yes, sure, this is the article that used virtually none of what I said during an hour-long interview, or any of the papers I sent the writer. Including this paper, wh
Media Use Is Linked to Lower Psychological Well-Being https://t.co/k5tZA2EKuV スマホ・ゲーム・SNS等のデジタルメディアの使用時間が少ない人(1日1時間未満)は、ヘビーユーザー(1日5時間以上)よりも心理的幸福度が高い。中程度でも幸福感が低下。約22万人分のデータを使って検討。
Teens using digital media 1 hr or less/day reported highest levels of well-being,those using digital media >5 hours/day reported lowest levels of well-being.Heavy users were 2x as likely to experience compromised psychological well-being than light user
RT @MTH_Pitt: Heavy users (vs. light) of digital media were 48% to 171% more likely to be unhappy, to be in low in well-being, or to have s…
@dcsdk12 @TRidgeGrizzlies
Heavy users (vs. light) of digital media were 48% to 171% more likely to be unhappy, to be in low in well-being, or to have suicide risk factors such as depression, suicidal ideation, or past suicide attempts. https://t.co/i03jpwsttr
@justincoulson @podesta_lesley @JonHaidt My take: If you analyze the data using the same techniques, the results are actually very similar (often 2x as many heavy vs. light users who are depressed, unhappy, etc.) Specific example: https://t.co/1NYYAXM50I G
Media Use Is Linked to Lower Psychological Well-Being: Evidence from Three Datasets. https://t.co/wIQZ4UqgJc
RT @jean_twenge: @toddkashdan Actually it's not subtle. If you analyze the data the same way, you get the same results: https://t.co/1NYYAX…
@toddkashdan Actually it's not subtle. If you analyze the data the same way, you get the same results: https://t.co/1NYYAXM50I The difference lies in reporting % variance explained (small) vs. % low in well-being at light vs. heavy use (large, often 2x).
Perhaps it is time for you to leave Twitter for today. "Heavy users (vs. light) were twice as likely to report having attempted suicide.” https://t.co/VNJ1BatRjF
RT @DrAndreaHoward: let's digest the actual numbers a bit. The quote references a paper (Twenge & Campbell) that uses U.S. Youth Risk Behav…
RT @DrAndreaHoward: let's digest the actual numbers a bit. The quote references a paper (Twenge & Campbell) that uses U.S. Youth Risk Behav…
let's digest the actual numbers a bit. The quote references a paper (Twenge & Campbell) that uses U.S. Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance Survey data, among others. In 2015 (and some other years), that survey asked about screen time and suicide... /4 h
@aggieerin I hear you. The popular press piece seems way too strong. What do you make of the academic paper she links to? I don't know this well enough to judge if it is a reasonable analysis. https://t.co/tN4JSRstOw
@TomHollenstein @drkatemills @ldsteinberg @nytdavidbrooks @JonHaidt New paper just out: https://t.co/1NYYAXM50I And yes, same CDC dataset.