Loneliness in the digital world: Co-developing smartphone-based research to examine how online social experiences impact adolescent mental health
数字世界中的孤独:共同开发基于智能手机的研究,以研究在线社交体验如何影响青少年心理健康
基本信息
- 批准号:MR/X002608/1
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 35.73万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:英国
- 项目类别:Research Grant
- 财政年份:2022
- 资助国家:英国
- 起止时间:2022 至 无数据
- 项目状态:未结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
Young people today are 'digital natives'. Using digital technologies like smartphones is commonplace and 'second nature' for young people. Young people increasingly communicate online, strengthening existing bonds and finding new ones. However, many fear the increasing time young people spend online may harm their mental health, particularly that online interactions may not offer the same opportunities for emotional growth and support as offline interactions, contributing to feelings of loneliness. Our study aims to investigate the impact of online and offline social interactions on feelings of loneliness using new methods of data collection and analysis, and at the same time develop best-practice guidelines for future research using these methods that suits the needs of young people and fits within their daily lives. We will build on a new research method called Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA). Despite mass take-up of digital technologies in young people, researchers have been slow to embed these into research, which is often still conducted using long questionnaires, are not always appealing to young people, and rarely offer opportunities to collect data on experiences as they happen. EMA is different - it collects brief snapshots of data several times a day through smartphone apps. We will use this technology to collect rich, real-time data over many time-points, while also making sure the tools used are appealing to young people. There is currently insufficient work to ensure EMA suits the needs of young people, or that measures used are reliable and appropriate. There is still little understanding of what young people think about EMA research and how it can fit into their busy lives, especially in younger adolescents (12-15yrs); an important developmental period for the emergence of mental ill health. We will form a Young Person's Advisory Group (YPAG) of ~10 young people 12-15yrs from diverse backgrounds, recruited through an existing large group of research participants called 'Generation Scotland' and organisations such as SHINE and YouthLink Scotland. Working with these young people, we will establish best practice guidance for conducting EMA in this age group. We will also co-produce a research protocol for a new EMA study on how online and offline social acceptance and rejection impacts loneliness and wellbeing in young people. We will consult with other stakeholders, e.g. parents and educators, to ensure that this study is feasible, appropriate and doesn't conflict with school or family life. This work will be published as a formal scientific paper, co-written with members of the YPAG. We will also seek the YPAGs views on using digital tools for mental health treatments and interventions, informing future use of these methods in clinical practice. We will then conduct a full study (N=200 young people, 12-15 years from Generation Scotland) using this protocol. While final details of the study will be decided through YPAG consultations, we anticipate participants will take part over 14 days, completing short surveys 3-4 times a day, considering their most notable social interaction since the last survey. They will answer questions like whether this was social acceptance or rejection; whether it was online or offline; and their relationship with this person (e.g., a peer, teacher, family member, stranger). They will then answer questions about their mood and feelings of loneliness. Through this, we will illuminate how online and offline social interaction impact loneliness, well-being, and mental health in young people. At the end of the project, the data will become part of the Generation Scotland study, meaning it will be safely stored long-term and allow linkage of our data to other existing and future information on these young people, such as health records or genetic data. Finally, other researchers will be able to access and use the data through Generation Scotland's established access route
现在的年轻人都是“数字化原生代”。使用智能手机等数字技术对年轻人来说是司空见惯的“第二天性”。年轻人越来越多地在网上交流,加强现有的联系并寻找新的联系。然而,许多人担心年轻人花在网上的时间越来越多,可能会损害他们的心理健康,特别是在线互动可能不会提供与离线互动相同的情感成长和支持机会,从而导致孤独感。我们的研究旨在使用新的数据收集和分析方法来调查在线和离线社交互动对孤独感的影响,同时为未来的研究制定最佳实践指南,使用这些方法适合年轻人的需求并适合他们的日常生活。我们将建立一个新的研究方法,称为生态瞬时评估(EMA)。尽管年轻人大量使用数字技术,但研究人员在将这些技术纳入研究方面进展缓慢,这些研究通常仍然使用长问卷进行,并不总是吸引年轻人,而且很少提供收集经验数据的机会。EMA是不同的-它通过智能手机应用程序每天收集几次数据的简短快照。我们将利用这项技术在许多时间点收集丰富的实时数据,同时确保所使用的工具对年轻人有吸引力。目前还没有足够的工作来确保环境管理适应年轻人的需要,或者所使用的措施是可靠和适当的。对于年轻人对EMA研究的看法以及它如何适应他们的忙碌生活的理解仍然很少,特别是在年轻的青少年(12- 15岁)中;这是出现精神疾病的重要发展时期。我们将成立一个年轻人的咨询小组(YPAG)约10名来自不同背景的12- 15岁的年轻人,通过一个名为“苏格兰一代”的现有大型研究参与者小组和SHINE和YouthLink Scotland等组织招募。与这些年轻人合作,我们将建立在这个年龄组进行EMA的最佳实践指南。我们还将为EMA的一项新研究共同制定一项研究方案,该研究旨在研究在线和离线社会接受和拒绝如何影响年轻人的孤独感和幸福感。我们会谘询其他持份者,例如家长和教育工作者,以确保这项研究是可行和适当的,并且不会与学校或家庭生活有恩怨。这项工作将作为正式的科学论文发表,与YPAG的成员共同撰写。我们还将征求YPAG对使用数字化工具进行心理健康治疗和干预的意见,为未来在临床实践中使用这些方法提供信息。然后,我们将使用该方案进行一项全面研究(N=200名年轻人,来自苏格兰一代,年龄为12-15岁)。虽然研究的最终细节将通过YPAG协商决定,但我们预计参与者将在14天内参与,每天完成3-4次简短的调查,考虑到他们自上次调查以来最显着的社交互动。他们会回答这样的问题,比如这是社会接受还是拒绝;是在线还是离线;以及他们与这个人的关系(例如,同龄人、老师、家庭成员、陌生人)。然后,他们将回答有关他们的情绪和孤独感的问题。通过这一点,我们将阐明在线和离线社交互动如何影响年轻人的孤独感,幸福感和心理健康。在该项目结束时,这些数据将成为苏格兰一代研究的一部分,这意味着它将被安全地长期存储,并允许我们的数据与这些年轻人的其他现有和未来信息相关联,例如健康记录或遗传数据。最后,其他研究人员将能够通过Generation Scotland建立的访问路线访问和使用这些数据
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Heather Whalley其他文献
Epigenome-Wide Association Study of Alcohol Consumption in N=8161 Individuals and Relevance to Alcohol Use Disorder Pathophysiology
- DOI:
10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.02.192 - 发表时间:
2022-05-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Falk Lohoff;Toni Clarke;Zachary A. Kaminsky;Rosie Walker;Mairead Bermingham;Jeesun Jung;Stewart Morris;Daniel Rosoff;Miruna Barbu;Katrin Charlet;Mark Adams;Jisoo Lee;David Howard;Emma O'Connell;Heather Whalley;David Porteous;Andrew McIntosh;Kathryn Evans - 通讯作者:
Kathryn Evans
P582. Local and Global Brain Ageing in Cognitive Subgroups of Early Psychosis
- DOI:
10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.02.819 - 发表时间:
2022-05-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Shalaila Haas;Ruiyang Ge;Nicole Sanford;Amirhossein Modabbernia;Abraham Reichenberg;Heather Whalley;Rene S. Kahn;Sophia Frangou - 通讯作者:
Sophia Frangou
27. HOW “DYSLEXIA GENES” INFLUENCE BRAIN STRUCTURE AND CONNECTIVITY?
27. “阅读障碍基因”如何影响大脑结构和连接性?
- DOI:
10.1016/j.euroneuro.2024.08.141 - 发表时间:
2024-10-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:6.700
- 作者:
Jingjing Zhao;Yueye Zhao;Hayley Mountford;Joanna Moodie;Colin Buchanan;Heather Whalley;Simon Cox;Michelle Luciano - 通讯作者:
Michelle Luciano
783. Neurobiological Findings from a Ten-Year Prospective Longitudinal Study of Mood Disorder
- DOI:
10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.02.850 - 发表时间:
2017-05-15 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Heather Whalley;Thomas Nickson;Stella Chan;Liana Romaniuk;Stephen Lawrie;Andrew McIntosh - 通讯作者:
Andrew McIntosh
The Brain Age Gap and Genetic Liability for Depression and Inflammation
- DOI:
10.1016/j.biopsych.2023.02.054 - 发表时间:
2023-05-01 - 期刊:
- 影响因子:
- 作者:
Laura Han;Yara Toenders;Xueyi Shen;Yuri Milaneschi;Heather Whalley;Lianne Schmaal; ENIGMA MDD consortium - 通讯作者:
ENIGMA MDD consortium
Heather Whalley的其他文献
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{{ truncateString('Heather Whalley', 18)}}的其他基金
Acquiring rich longitudinal passive sleep data across childhood and adolescence (8-18yrs)-the AMBIENT sleep study
获取童年和青春期(8-18 岁)丰富的纵向被动睡眠数据 - AMBIENT 睡眠研究
- 批准号:
MR/X028917/1 - 财政年份:2023
- 资助金额:
$ 35.73万 - 项目类别:
Research Grant
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