Screen Sense: Parenting in a Digital World
Screen Sense: Parenting in a Digital World
Episode 5: How do we ask better research questions about tech and mental health?
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Episode 5: How do we ask better research questions about tech and mental health?

It’s one of the biggest questions in digital parenting: Do digital technologies cause mental health problems in children and teenagers? The answer is complicated, and the desire to find a simple, cause-and-effect answer (“screens cause anxiety” or “social media makes kids depressed”) doesn’t line up with what the evidence actually shows.

In this episode, Pete and Andy dig into some of the reasons why studies in this area are often messy, why we need a set of minimum expected standards for tech companies in terms of sharing data with researchers, and how good research can get derailed by the toxic state of the wider debate.

Show notes

The Family Online Safety Institute

Luisa Fassi’s paper on social media use in adolescents with and without mental health conditions

Christopher Kelly and Tali Sharot’s paper on how web-browsing patterns reflect and shape mood and mental health

Aiman El Asam and Adrienne Katz’s paper on vulnerable young people and their experience of online risks

Sonia Livingstone and Jasmina Byrne’s chapter on parenting in the digital age, and the challenges of parental responsibility

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