People are silhouetted as they pose with mobile devices in front of a screen projected with a Facebook logo, in this picture illustration taken in Zenica October 29, 2014. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Files For ...
Scrolling through your Facebook news feed for the 10th time today? Updating your status – again? Checking to see what your ex-best friend from high school is up to? Clicking through friends’ vacation ...
Scrolling through your Facebook feed may seem harmless, but a new study in California suggests that when you do so, your brain reacts in a similar way to that of people who use cocaine and are ...
In a small study of Facebook users in Poland, depression was one predictor of greater vulnerability to becoming dependent on using the social media site. So-called Facebook intrusion is similar to an ...
Friends on social media such as Facebook can be a great source of comfort during periods of stress. However, if they don't receive any support offline, stressed users are at risk of developing a ...
Facebook conducted secret tests to determine the magnitude of its Android users’ Facebook addiction, according to a new report published yesterday. Like a bunch of crash test dummies, users of the ...
Social media is a fact of life now — but I’m sure I’m not alone in wondering whether we’re using it, or whether it is now using us. This same train of thought has also lead me to wonder how addicted ...
Facebook affects my productivity, my mental wellbeing, and my relationship with my wife, who isn’t too excited about my frequent checking. I need help. That said, I can’t (or won’t) just delete my ...
I've been Facebook-free for about six weeks, and I don't miss it at all. I stay in touch with my friends in other ways, and am out of touch with my acquaintances and "Facebook friends," which in all ...
Researchers at Michigan State University are exploring the idea that there’s more to “social media addiction” than casual joking about being too online might suggest. Their paper, titled “Excessive ...
For many Facebook users, the urge to like a kitten video or snoop on a high-school flame is almost irresistible. As it turns out, this type of "Facebook addiction" may show up in the brain: A new ...