Science of the Spirit
In just the five years between 2010 and 2015, the number of U.S. teens who felt useless and joyless - classic symptoms of depression - surged 33 percent in large national surveys. Teen suicide attempts increased 23 percent. Even more troubling, the number of 13 to 18-year-olds who committed suicide jumped 31 percent.
In a new paper published in Clinical Psychological Science, my colleagues and I found that the increases in depression, suicide attempts and suicide appeared among teens from every background - more privileged and less privileged, across all races and ethnicities and in every region of the country. All told, our analysis found that the generation of teens I call "iGen" - those born after 1995 - is much more likely to experience mental health issues than their millennial predecessors.
What happened so that so many more teens, in such a short period of time, would feel depressed, attempt suicide and commit suicide? After scouring several large surveys of teens for clues, I found that all of the possibilities traced back to a major change in teens' lives: the sudden ascendance of the smartphone.
All signs point to the screen
Because the years between 2010 to 2015 were a period of steady economic growth and falling unemployment, it's unlikely that economic malaise was a factor. Income inequality was (and still is) an issue, but it didn't suddenly appear in the early 2010s: This gap between the rich and poor had been widening for decades. We found that the time teens spent on homework barely budged between 2010 and 2015, effectively ruling out academic pressure as a cause.
However, according to the Pew Research Center, smartphone ownership crossed the 50 percent threshold in late 2012 - right when teen depression and suicide began to increase. By 2015, 73 percent of teens had access to a smartphone.
Not only did smartphone use and depression increase in tandem, but time spent online was linked to mental health issues across two different data sets. We found that teens who spent five or more hours a day online were 71 percent more likely than those who spent only one hour a day to have at least one suicide risk factor (depression, thinking about suicide, making a suicide plan or attempting suicide). Overall, suicide risk factors rose significantly after two or more hours a day of time online.
Of course, it's possible that instead of time online causing depression, depression causes more time online. But three other studies show that is unlikely (at least, when viewed through social media use).
Two followed people over time, with both studies finding that spending more time on social media led to unhappiness, while unhappiness did not lead to more social media use. A third randomly assigned participants to give up Facebook for a week versus continuing their usual use. Those who avoided Facebook reported feeling less depressed at the end of the week.
The argument that depression might cause people to spend more time online doesn't also explain why depression increased so suddenly after 2012. Under that scenario, more teens became depressed for an unknown reason and then started buying smartphones, which doesn't seem too logical.
What's lost when we're plugged in
Even if online time doesn't directly harm mental health, it could still adversely affect it in indirect ways, especially if time online crowds out time for other activities.
For example, while conducting research for my book on iGen, I found that teens now spend much less time interacting with their friends in person. Interacting with people face to face is one of the deepest wellsprings of human happiness; without it, our moods start to suffer and depression often follows. Feeling socially isolated is also one of the major risk factors for suicide. We found that teens who spent more time than average online and less time than average with friends in person were the most likely to be depressed. Since 2012, that's what has occurred en masse: Teens have spent less time on activities known to benefit mental health (in-person social interaction) and more time on activities that may harm it (time online).
Teens are also sleeping less, and teens who spend more time on their phones are more likely to not be getting enough sleep. Not sleeping enough is a major risk factor for depression, so if smartphones are causing less sleep, that alone could explain why depression and suicide increased so suddenly.
Depression and suicide have many causes: Genetic predisposition, family environments, bullying and trauma can all play a role. Some teens would experience mental health problems no matter what era they lived in.
But some vulnerable teens who would otherwise not have had mental health issues may have slipped into depression due to too much screen time, not enough face-to-face social interaction, inadequate sleep or a combination of all three.
It might be argued that it's too soon to recommend less screen time, given that the research isn't completely definitive. However, the downside to limiting screen time - say, to two hours a day or less - is minimal. In contrast, the downside to doing nothing - given the possible consequences of depression and suicide - seems, to me, quite high.
It's not too early to think about limiting screen time; let's hope it's not too late.
Reader Comments
What for? Just f***ing get rid of it!!! What's wrong with you???
Heinz Von Foerster and the Unholy Trinity: 'Microwave Research', 'Living Organisms', "Cybernetics'.
Internet gossip mainly...
Google Groups. alt.mindcontrol
Subject: Nazi human experimentation torture
"Actually I'm interested in a detailed wartime history of the Nazi
microwave scientist, Heinz Von Foerster. He seems to have no history
prior to his arrival in the United States in 1949 presumably as a part
of Operation Paperclip. This might be an overstatement for we find
in reference [4] below that he wrote a paper in 1943 about the
klystron while in Germany. We also find in reference [6] the
following quote, "Friedrich Kittler had asked me to inquire into the
research Heinz had done in Berlin, which seems to have been of some
considerable importance for the war. But Heinz only told me how he had
managed to get out of Berlin in the very last days by offering to take
the valuable instruments and important documents of the laboratory to
the safety of Vienna." In any case an American engineer for Raytheon
claims to have discovered the microwave oven in 1946 when a candy bar
melted in his pocket. See reference [1]. This despite some websites
[2] which claim the microwave oven was being developed by the Nazi's
for food preparation on the Eastern Front.
Returning to the subject of Heinz Von Foerster, the above listed
references are all I have found concerning his war time activities.
Was this record expunged as a part of Paperclip? Was he ever involved
in human experimentation? His later biography is suggestive. Upon
coming to America he heads microwave research at the University of
Illinois, Urbana [5] and participates in the Josiah Macy Conferences
on Cybernetics [11]. We should note that these conferences were a
conduit for CIA MKULTRA funding [10]. In 1958 he founds and heads the
Biological Computer Laboratory at the University of Illinois, Urbana.
A university which has been designated an NSA Center for Academic
Excellence [13]. A lot of the work done at the BCL was for the
military [9], "on the technological realization of computational
mechanisms observed in living organisms, the theory and application of
computational principles, the mechanization of cognitive processes,
direct access intelligence systems and information processing." It
looks like Heinz did some work modeling the basilar membrane of the
inner ear. Was this to study the effects of microwaves on the basilar
membrane. He became the darling of the American Society for
Cybernetics (ASC) which was and offshoot of the Macy Conferences [11].
An interesting organization on nobody's radar - check out the list of
ASC cyberneticians [11] and explore their curriculum vitae."
This cell phone business has been rotten since its inception. I spent a few months in the early days reading up on it, (Robert O. Becker put out a prescient book at the time). But I don't think there was a single person in my immediate life, not even one, who took me seriously and made the same choices I made. -I was careful not to appear as one of those raving lunatic conspiracy theory types, I tried to make my comments interesting and easily accessible, to live by example, etc. -And indeed, to deal with the zero-results, took on the attitude of, "Well, you've been warned. Free will and all. The long lesson awaits. Good luck."
I think the Long Lesson is perhaps, on a soul level, understood to be enormously valuable and may be why people go to lengths to screw up their lives and get angry if you point out the brick walls they're about to smash into. It's bad karma to prevent other people's chosen lessons.
On the up-side, without any extra effort beyond simply not using a cell phone, I think my decidedly average brain has by default become one of the more powerful in my community. That's a plus, I suppose. -And probably one of the founding motivations behind the development of the whole cell phone revolution in the first place.
Yeah, I know what you mean.
From the word go, cellphones were all about 'Operation Dumb-Ass'.
Way in the back of beyond, I was the first person on my block to actually get a cellphone. A couple of days on, after receiving the shock of recognition that it was actually a false-friend fool-tool for the purposes of electromagnetically enforcing total-fuzz-head dumb-assed-ness on a person, I quickly binned it (Am I being paranoid here? "Nope". Dump.) and that was way, way before anyone else I knew even owned one.
Years later, by the time just about everyone and his grandmother had one, I remember sitting in The Effra Hall Tavern on 9/11, supping a pint, watching the overhead pub TV with that Marvel Comic scenario playing out of those planes smashing into the Twin Towers over and over again, watching everyone lapping it all up like a bunch of compliant cellphone zombie dumbasses, really, to me, that was the moment of absolute confirmation, viz. the cellphone's role as total-Dr-Evil-f*cktard-sheep-pen-soylent-green-geopolitical-brain-marshmallow-izing-tool.






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