Christopher A. Kelly, Yikun Chi, Nicholas Haber et al.
The relationship between digital media use and mental health remains poorly understood, in part because real-world digital behavior is rarely captured at scale. This intensive longitudinal study tracked participants' complete natural smartphone interactions over one year. We collected screenshots every 5 seconds from 145 adults (yielding 111 million screenshots), alongside biweekly assessments of anxiety and depression (mean = 24 surveys). The valence and arousal of each screenshot were assessed using a deep learning affect model. Individuals showed highly idiosyncratic media patterns, with substantially more variance in anxiety and depression accounted for within-person than between-person. Day-to-day fluctuations in the valence and arousal of a person's screen content predicted subsequent changes in depression and anxiety, whereas between-person differences did not. Specifically, greater exposure to low-arousal negative content was associated with higher depression and anxiety. These findings underscore the dynamic, idiosyncratic nature of digital consumption and the need for targeted measurement and intervention.