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The Psychological Impact of Living in a Virtual World Exploring MySpace Users Ages 14-24 Jyenny Babcock California State University, Dominguez Hills.

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Presentation on theme: "The Psychological Impact of Living in a Virtual World Exploring MySpace Users Ages 14-24 Jyenny Babcock California State University, Dominguez Hills."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Psychological Impact of Living in a Virtual World Exploring MySpace Users Ages 14-24 Jyenny Babcock California State University, Dominguez Hills

2 Purpose of Study To learn more about teen and young adult Internet behavior within virtual communities in relation to:  Depression  Self-esteem  Perceived family and friend support  Bad online experiences

3 Literature Overview Virtual community defined as a “social- networking space where people connect with friends and make new ones…” (Garret, 2006) Virtual communities have become one of the fastest growing Internet activities of our time

4 Literature Overview cont. Initial studies about Internet use indicated:  Too much time spent online leads to negative outcomes (Kraut et al., 1998)  Males are more comfortable with Internet than females (Morahan-Martin, 1998)  Few studies have addressed bad online experiences

5 Literature Overview cont. Current literature about Internet use suggests:  Gender – the gap has closed (Gross, 2004)  Depression – decreased (Shaw & Gant, 2002a)  Self-esteem – increased (Shaw & Gant, 2002a)  Perceived social support – increased (Rohall et al., 2002)

6 Research Questions What is the relationship between time spent online and the number of online friends with depression, self-esteem and perceived social support? What is the rate and nature of bad online experiences?

7 Participants Data collected from 1,257 participants  Study based on 924 participants aged between 14-24 (M=20)  40% males, 60% females

8 Method & Measures A 65-question, anonymous, online survey  Yale Single Question depression inventory (Mahoney, Drinka, & Abler, 1994)  Rosenberg Self-Esteem scale (Rosenberg, 1989)  PSS-FA & PSS-FR scales (Procidano & Heller, 1983)

9 Results Favorite Virtual Community  90% preferred MySpace  No gender effect Time Spent Online  Total hours per week (M = 11)  No gender effect  More time online = more online friends

10 Results cont. Favorite Online Activities  Instant Messaging  Reading comments about own webpage  Posting photographs  Gender effect

11 Results cont. Depression  More time online = more depression  No gender effect  No number of online friends effect

12 Results cont. Self-Esteem  More time online = lower self-esteem  No gender effect  No number of online friends effect

13 Results cont. Perceived Family Support  More time online = less perceived family support  Females showed more perceived family support  No number of online friends effect

14 Results cont. Perceived Friend Support  No correlation between time spent online with perceived friend support  Females showed more perceived friend support  Higher number of online friends = more perceived friend support

15 Results cont. Bad Online Experiences  32% of participants reported having a bad online experience  Females more than males  bad online experiences  bad online experiences sexual in nature  bad online experiences with a stranger

16 Discussion Limitations  Did not examine if the bad online experiences had any physically harmful or other lasting deleterious effects  Did not investigate what types of behaviors precipitated bad online experiences

17 Discussion cont. Conclusion/Implications  Far fewer cases of bad online experiences reported than media portrays  Some negative psychological effects  Some positive psychological benefits

18 Discussion Cont. Risks of virtual community participation  Depression  Self-esteem  Perceived family support  Exposure to bad online experiences Benefits of virtual community participation  Circle of online friends  Perceived friend support


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