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Research: Yes, social media might be making kids depressed

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Written by: Jared Marsh
Published: 26 May 2025

As rates of depression and suicide in youth spike, experts are asking whether social media makes kids depressed — or whether depressed kids simply spend more time on social media?

A new study provides answers. 

Researchers at UC San Francisco found that as preteens used more social media, their depressive symptoms increased. 

Yet the reverse wasn’t true — a rise in depressive symptoms didn’t predict a later increase in social media use.

On average, kids’ social media use rose from seven to 73 minutes per day over the three years of the study and their depressive symptoms went up 35%. 

The study, which was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, or NIH, was published in JAMA Network Open.

The research team, led by Jason Nagata, MD, MSc, associate professor in UCSF’s Department of Pediatrics, examined data following nearly 12,000 kids aged 9 to 10 years and then three years later at 12 to 13. 

The study is among the first to use within-person longitudinal data, meaning researchers could track changes over time in each child to accurately assess the link between social media and depression.

“There has been ongoing debate about whether social media contributes to depression or simply reflects underlying depressive symptoms,” said Nagata. “These findings provide evidence that social media may be contributing to the development of depressive symptoms.”

While it’s unclear why social media increases depressive symptoms, prior research points to risks such as cyberbullying and disrupted sleep. 

In fact, Nagata and team just published a separate study in The Lancet Regional Health - Americas looking at the same cohort of participants, focusing instead on the effects of cyberbullying.

One year after reporting being cyberbullied, 11- to 12- year-olds were:

• 2.62 times more likely to report suicidal thoughts or a suicide attempt.
• 2.31 times more likely to experiment with a substance (4.65 times more likely with marijuana, 3.37 with nicotine, and 1.92 with alcohol).

The study found kids aged 11 to 12 years who were cyberbullied were 2.62 times more likely to report suicidal ideation or a suicide attempt one year later. Additionally, those kids were also 2.31 times more likely to experiment with a substance (4.65 times more likely with marijuana, 3.37 with nicotine, and 1.92 with alcohol) in the following year.

Increasingly, the youngest generations find themselves facing a catch-22, with growing evidence that social media is associated with depressive symptoms and risky behavior yet also a primary area for them to connect and communicate with friends.

To address this reality, the American Academy of Pediatrics suggests using the tools in its Family Media Plan to create healthier digital habits for both kids and parents.

“As a father of two young kids, I know that simply telling children to ‘get off your phone’ doesn’t really work,” said Nagata. “Parents can lead by example with open, nonjudgmental conversations about screen use. Setting screen-free times for the whole family, such as during meals or before bed, can help build healthier digital habits for everyone, including adults.”

Authors: UCSF authors are Jason M. Nagata, M.D., Christopher D. Otmar, Ph.D., Joan Shim, M.P.H., Priyadharshini Balasubramanian, M.P.H., Chloe M. Cheng, M.D., Elizabeth J. Li, M.P.H., Abubakr A.A. Al-Shoaibi, Ph.D., and Iris Y. Shao, Ph.D.  For all authors, see the paper.

Funding: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (K08HL159350 and R01MH135492) and the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation (2022056). For all funding, see the paper.

Jared Marsh writes for UC San Francisco.

Making eye contact and small talk with strangers is more than just being polite − the social benefits of psychological generosity

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Written by: Linda R. Tropp, UMass Amherst
Published: 26 May 2025

 

Eyes down, headphones on – what message are you sending? vm/E+ via Getty Images

How much do you engage with others when you’re out in public? Lots of people don’t actually engage with others much at all. Think of commuters on public transportation staring down at their phones with earbuds firmly in place.

As a professor of social psychology, I see similar trends on my university campus, where students often put on their headphones and start checking their phones before leaving the lecture hall on the way to their next class.

Curating daily experiences in these ways may appeal to your personal interests, but it also limits opportunities for social connection. Humans are social beings: We desire to feel connected to others, and even connecting with strangers can potentially boost our mood.

Though recent technological advances afford greater means for connection than at any other moment in human history, many people still feel isolated and disconnected. Indeed, loneliness in the American population has reached epidemic levels, and Americans’ trust in each other has reached a historic low.

At the same time, our attention is increasingly being pulled in varied directions within a highly saturated information environment, now commonly known as the “attention economy.”

It is perhaps not surprising, then, that so many Americans are experiencing a crisis of social connection. Research in social psychology helps to explain how the small behaviors and choices we make as individuals affect our experiences with others in public settings.

Where you focus your attention

One factor shaping people’s experiences in public settings concerns where they focus their attention. Since there is more information out in the world than anyone could ever realistically take in, people are driven to conserve their limited mental resources for those things that seem most crucial to navigating the world successfully. What this means is that every person’s attention is finite and selective: By attending to certain bits of information, you necessarily tune out others, whether you’re aware of doing so or not.

More often than not, the information you deem worthy of attention also tends to be self-relevant. That is, people are more likely to engage with information that piques their interest or relates to them in some way, whereas they tend to ignore information that seems unrelated or irrelevant to their existence.

These ingrained tendencies might make logical sense from an evolutionary perspective, but when applied to everyday social interaction, they suggest that people will limit their attention to and regard for other people unless they see others as somehow connected to them or relevant to their lives.

One unfortunate consequence is that a person may end up treating interactions with other people as transactions, with a primary focus on getting one’s own needs met, or one’s own questions answered. A very different approach would involve seeing interactions with others as opportunities for social connection; being willing to expend some additional mental energy to listen to others’ experiences and exchange views on topics of shared interest can serve as a foundation for building social relationships.

young woman walks past a young man who is staring down at his phone
It can feel alienating to be surrounded by people who have basically hung out a ‘do not disturb’ sign. Drazen/E+ via Getty Images

How others interpret your actions

Also, by focusing so much attention on their own individual interests, people may inadvertently signal disinterest to others in their social environments.

As an example, imagine how it would feel to be on the receiving end of those daily commuting rituals. You find yourself surrounded by people whose ears are closed off, whose eyes are down and whose attention is elsewhere – and you might start to feel like no one really cares whether you exist or not.

As social creatures, it’s natural for human beings to want to be seen and acknowledged by other people. Small gestures such as eye contact or a smile, even from a stranger, can foster feelings of connection by signaling that our existence matters. Instead, when these signals are absent, a person may come to feel like they don’t matter, or that they’re not worthy of others’ attention.

How to foster connection in public spaces

For all these reasons, it may prove valuable to reflect on how you use your limited mental resources, as a way to be more mindful and purposeful about what and who garner your attention. As I encourage my students to do, people can choose to engage in what I refer to as psychological generosity: You can intentionally redirect some of your attention toward the other people around you and expend mental resources beyond what is absolutely necessary to navigate the social world.

Engaging in psychological generosity doesn’t need to be a heavy lift, nor does it call for any grand gestures. But it will probably take a little more effort beyond the bare minimum it typically takes to get by. In other words, it will likely involve moving from being merely transactional with other people to becoming more relational while navigating interactions with them.

A few simple examples of psychological generosity might include actions such as:

  • Tuning in by turning off devices. Rather than default to focusing attention on your phone, try turning off its volume or setting it to airplane mode. See if you notice any changes in how you engage with other people in your immediate environment.

  • Making eye contact and small talk. As historian Timothy Snyder writes, eye contact and small talk are “not just polite” but constitute “part of being a responsible member of society.”

  • Smiling and greeting someone you don’t know. Take the principle of “innocent until proven guilty” to the realm of social relations, by showing your willingness to welcome other people rather than displaying disinterest and avoidance. Such simple acts may help to foster feelings of belonging and build a sense of community with others.

Woman taps her bus pass and smiles at the driver
Acknowledging another human with a smile, even when using an automated system, can help them feel seen and valued. izusek/E+ via Getty Images

Among the most cynical, examples like these may initially be written off as reflecting pleas to practice the random acts of kindness often trumpeted on bumper stickers. Yet acts like these are far from random – they require intention and redirection of your attention toward action, like any new habit you may wish to cultivate.

Others might wonder whether potential benefits to society are worth the individual cost, given that attention and effort are limited resources. But, ultimately, our well-being as individuals and the health of our communities grow from social connection.

Practicing acts of psychological generosity, then, can provide you with opportunities to benefit from social connection, at the same time as these acts can pay dividends to other people and to the social fabric of your community.The Conversation

Linda R. Tropp, Professor of Social Psychology, UMass Amherst

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

New bench honors work of Mike and Kim Riley at Highland Springs Reservoir

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Written by: Maile Field
Published: 25 May 2025
mikeandkimriley.jpg
Mike and Kim Riley. Courtesy photo.

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — A memorial bench honoring Lake County's Kim and Mike Riley was installed recently at the lower end of Highland Springs Reservoir. 

The fixture commemorates the Rileys' some 20-plus years of volunteer labor in the creation and maintenance of trails in what is now known as Highland Springs Recreation Area.

Mike Riley died unexpectedly in April 2023 at the age of 64. His widow and lifetime partner, Kim Riley, mourns his loss enormously and reflected recently on Mike's contributions to Lake County's premier hiking, biking and equestrian recreation area.

"He was the worker bee," she said. "And he was always passionate about community service." 

Kim explained that he believed strongly in public access to nature.

The Rileys' work began when Lake County's water resources director at the time, Bob Lossius, said his department "didn't have funding to make their vision of the trail system" a reality, according to Kim. 

The creation of trails in the Highland Springs Recreation Area fell to a community of volunteers including the Rileys and a team of many others, she said. 

Working in coordination with county officials, the Rileys and their team, spearheaded by Kelseyville's Karen Sullivan and aided by the late Quincy Andrus, set out to turn existing features such as firebreaks and bulldozer tracks into recreational trails for humans. 


rileybench2.jpg
The new memorial bench honoring Lake County's Kim and Mike Riley. Courtesy photo.


They also restored grown-over trails created by Ann and Wayne Dunnebeck.

“Mike would come home (from his job with PG&E) and we'd go to work,” Kim said. "We'd grab the horses ... he had a chainsaw in his backpack, I had loppers and a handsaw ... we'd ride out and tie up for a few hours." 

The couple cleared and maintained trails throughout the recreation area.

Kim Riley said she loves the 3,200-acre county-owned site for the diversity of its ecosystems. She said it hosts forested areas, open range, shaded areas and several watersheds that feed into Clear Lake.

The Rileys, who made Lake County their home 40 years ago, lived just south of Kelseyville most of that time. They both retired about 12 years ago. They have two children, Sean Riley and Katie Lecoq.

The memorial bench was designed and purchased using discretionary funds allotted to District 5 Supervisor Jessica Pyska. 

"The Rileys define 'good citizen' and their contribution to the Highland Springs Recreation Area is priceless," Pyska said. "As a community, we have been very fortunate to have them walk among us."

She added, “The sudden tragic loss of Mike was devastating. I like the idea of having a place to sit and look over the water to think about the enormity of his gift."

Maile Field is a longtime Lake County resident, journalist, farmer and county planning commissioner.


rileybench.jpg

A closeup of the plaque on the new memorial bench for Kim and Mike Riley. Courtesy photo.

Helping Paws: Dogs for the week

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 25 May 2025
LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — Lake County Animal Care and Control’s kennels are filled with dogs that deserve and need new homes.

The dogs available for adoption this week include mixes of Australian shepherd, border collie, Catahoula leopard dog, German shepherd, husky, Labrador Retriever, pit bull terrier, terrier and shepherd.

Dogs that are adopted from Lake County Animal Care and Control are either neutered or spayed, microchipped and, if old enough, given a rabies shot and county license before being released to their new owner. License fees do not apply to residents of the cities of Lakeport or Clearlake.

Those dogs and the others shown on this page at the Lake County Animal Care and Control shelter have been cleared for adoption.

Call Lake County Animal Care and Control at 707-263-0278 or visit the shelter online for information on visiting or adopting.

The shelter is located at 4949 Helbush in Lakeport.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 


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