Showing posts with label instagram. Show all posts
Showing posts with label instagram. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 February 2025

Social Media Impact on Mental Health Using Data Analytics: A Classified Review | Chapter 17 | Leading the Charge: A Guide to Management, Entrepreneurship and Technology in the Dynamic Business Landscape Edition 1

This study examines the complex relationship between social media use and mental health using a comprehensive methodology, highlighting both positive and negative effects. Social media has become a major source of dependency for many people who are struggling with mental health concerns. The phrase "social media" describes a broad category of digital platforms that allow users to engage with each other in a virtual community and exchange, co-create, or share various types of digital content, including messages, images, videos, and information. Examples of these platforms include Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Studies have demonstrated that the rates of social media use by individuals with a variety of mental diseases, including psychotic disorders, depression, and other severe mental health issues, are comparable to those of the general population. Social media's pervasiveness has led to an explosion of studies examining its effects on mental health. This study applies data analytics to a thorough analysis of the body of literature, classifying the various conclusions using a hierarchical method. The study examines the possible advantages and disadvantages of social media use, investigating its connections to a range of mental health issues, such as social comparison, anxiety, and depression. The paper clarifies how data analytics may be used to comprehend the intricate link between social media and mental health by examining user behavior, linguistic trends, and content engagement. The study also highlights future prospects and constraints, emphasizing the necessity for longitudinal research and the ethical issues related to data collecting and processing in this field. With its insights into the complex effects of social media on mental health and its potential to stimulate more study and intervention techniques, this categorized review is an invaluable tool for academics, policymakers, and mental health practitioners.

 

Author (s) Details

 

Rajendra Jotawar
Acharya Dr. S. Radhakrishnan Road, Acharya P.O Soladevanahalli, Bangalore, India.

 

Punu N Gowda
Acharya Dr. S. Radhakrishnan Road, Acharya P.O Soladevanahalli, Bangalore, India.

 

Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-93-48859-98-3/CH17

Thursday, 14 March 2024

Instagram Use and Emerging Indian Female Adults Well-being during the COVID-19 | Chapter 2 | Recent Updates in Disease and Health Research Vol. 3

Research in the Well-being studies suggests that passive social networking sites use has a significant negative effect on the users well-being and the impact is mediated by the social comparison and Fear of Missing Out(FoMO) (Verduyn, 2015). The study re-examines the path suggested, during the Covid-19 crisis by quantitatively examining the Impact of passive Instagram use on the psychological well-being and the mediating roles of social comparison and FoMO of the Emerging Indian Female Adults aged 18 to 25 years who are at a critical stage of personality development [1] during the second wave of the covid-19 pandemic. The results of the study deviate from the path suggested [2] and While social comparison does not predict passive Instagram usage, FoMO predicts social comparison and mediates social comparison and psychological well-being during the pandemic.


Author(s) Details:

Santhosh Kumar Putta,
Department of Communication and Journalism, Osmania University, Hyderabad, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RUDHR-V3/article/view/13546

Saturday, 15 July 2023

The Mindset is the Message: Reflections on the Mindset Propagated by Respective Instagram Accounts| Chapter 6 | Recent Trends in Arts and Social Studies Vol. 4

 Nowadays, the “psychology” seems expected a marketable commodity and–like everything trending–is very present on social news. Still, unlike #bodypositivity, for example, the term has not still received much academic attention. This item aims at understanding which type of mindset public media advocate for and what method are chosen to articulate this. After giving an emic description and categorizing the principles communicated in a sample of Instagram posts, two judgments become salient: Inconsistencies and grammatical rules applying to nouns that connote sex or animateness bias. Because of contradictory ideas, for the recipient, the bad feeling of cognitive discord should arise–freedom from other people is accentuated, but also understanding and changing outlooks. Control is demanded but also giving in control etc. Mixed and contradictory ideas are shared not only by different reports but also by individual reports. These inconsistencies maybe related to Instagram’s design, which uniformly offers inputs and requires adaptability and a change of perspective. In addition, the imagined society with added recipients maybe defined as a core profit: all recipients process fundamental human occurrences such as refusal, failure, and loneliness. Although many ideas stress independence, on a fundamental level, it is about relation. The second finding concerns the photographs: if people are described, they are almost particularly men, even though it is unclear whether the goal group is male. There is some evidence that this is on account of gender-specific vocabulary, but it keep also be elucidated as women or transgender things being less apt to reflect the psychology idea in the understanding of account holders.

Author(s) Details:

Maja Jerrentrup,
University Landshut, India.

Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RTASS-V4/article/view/11100