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Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Taylor, ME; Schueller, SM; Russell, MA; Hoyle, RH; Odgers, CL
Published in: Affective science
December 2024

Concerns regarding the potential negative impacts of digital technology use on youth mental health and well-being are high. However, most studies have several methodological limitations: relying on cross-sectional designs and retrospective reports, assessing technology use as an omnibus construct, and focusing on between- instead of within-person comparisons. This study addresses these limitations by prospectively following young adolescents (n = 388) over a 14-day ecological momentary assessment study to test whether adolescents' digital technology use is linked with self-reported emotional dysregulation and self-esteem and whether these relationships are stronger for adolescent girls than boys. We found no evidence that adolescents experienced higher emotional dysregulation (b = - .02; p = .07) and lower self-esteem (b = .004; p = .32) than they normally do on days where they use more technology than they normally do (within-person). Adolescents with higher average daily technology use over the study period did not experience lower levels of self-esteem (between-person, b = - .02; p = .13). Adolescents with higher average daily technology use across the two-week period did report higher levels of emotional dysregulation (p = .01), albeit the between-person relation was small (b = .08). There was no evidence that gender moderated the associations, both between and within adolescents (bs = - .02-.13, p = .06 - .55). Our findings contribute to the growing counter-narrative that technology use does not have as large of an impact on adolescents' mental health and well-being as the public is concerned about.The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s42761-024-00282-w.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Affective science

DOI

EISSN

2662-205X

ISSN

2662-2041

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

5

Issue

4

Start / End Page

458 / 467
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Taylor, M. E., Schueller, S. M., Russell, M. A., Hoyle, R. H., & Odgers, C. L. (2024). Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages. Affective Science, 5(4), 458–467. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42761-024-00282-w
Taylor, Madison E., Stephen M. Schueller, Michael A. Russell, Rick H. Hoyle, and Candice L. Odgers. “Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages.Affective Science 5, no. 4 (December 2024): 458–67. https://doi.org/10.1007/s42761-024-00282-w.
Taylor ME, Schueller SM, Russell MA, Hoyle RH, Odgers CL. Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages. Affective science. 2024 Dec;5(4):458–67.
Taylor, Madison E., et al. “Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages.Affective Science, vol. 5, no. 4, Dec. 2024, pp. 458–67. Epmc, doi:10.1007/s42761-024-00282-w.
Taylor ME, Schueller SM, Russell MA, Hoyle RH, Odgers CL. Adolescents' Digital Technology Use, Emotional Dysregulation, and Self-Esteem: No Evidence of Same-Day Linkages. Affective science. 2024 Dec;5(4):458–467.

Published In

Affective science

DOI

EISSN

2662-205X

ISSN

2662-2041

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

5

Issue

4

Start / End Page

458 / 467