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| 005 | 20241111163347.0 | ||
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| 040 | _cLDD | ||
| 100 | _aSchwartz, David Et al. | ||
| 245 | _aEmerging adults' use of social media and adjustment during the pandemic | ||
| 260 | _aElsevier : Amsterdam, 2024 | ||
| 490 |
_aJournal of Applied Developmental Psychology _vVol. 92 |
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| 500 | _aDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, undergraduates found themselves in an unprecedented social situation. Campuses across North America closed, as universities moved to remote learning. When in-person classes resumed, students had to negotiate the return to on-campus life. The current investigation examines predictive associations between pandemic-related stressors and distress during this transition, focusing on social media activity as a potential moderator. A longitudinal sample of 349 students at an urban university (116 men, 222 women, 11 nonbinary; Mage = 20.37) completed consecutive waves of measures (fall 2021 to spring 2022). A cross-sectional replication was recruited in spring 2022 (163 men, 229 women, 34 nonbinary). In both samples, we assessed social media activity using a newly developed measure. We also assessed internalizing symptoms, loneliness, and exposure to pandemic stressors. COVID-19 stress predicted increases in internalizing symptoms, but the effect held only for students who acknowledged high levels of active online communication. | ||
| 650 | _aSocial Media | ||
| 856 |
_yclick here to online access _uhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0193397324000121 |
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_2ddc _cARTICLES _n0 |
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_c175148 _d175148 |
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