HCSIMay 6, 2019

Understanding Perceptions of Problematic Facebook Use: When People Experience Negative Life Impact and a Lack of Control

arXiv:1905.01911v153 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This research addresses the problem of social media addiction for users and designers, though it is incremental as it builds on existing survey-based studies.

The study investigated factors associated with perceived problematic Facebook use, finding that users who feel it negatively impacts their lives are more likely to be younger, male, spend more time on the platform at night, and engage in specific activities like viewing profiles and messaging friends.

While many people use social network sites to connect with friends and family, some feel that their use is problematic, seriously affecting their sleep, work, or life. Pairing a survey of 20,000 Facebook users measuring perceptions of problematic use with behavioral and demographic data, we examined Facebook activities associated with problematic use as well as the kinds of people most likely to experience it. People who feel their use is problematic are more likely to be younger, male, and going through a major life event such as a breakup. They spend more time on the platform, particularly at night, and spend proportionally more time looking at profiles and less time browsing their News Feeds. They also message their friends more frequently. While they are more likely to respond to notifications, they are also more likely to deactivate their accounts, perhaps in an effort to better manage their time. Further, they are more likely to have seen content about social media or phone addiction. Notably, people reporting problematic use rate the site as more valuable to them, highlighting the complex relationship between technology use and well-being. A better understanding of problematic Facebook use can inform the design of context-appropriate and supportive tools to help people become more in control.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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