Preprint
When "Time Online" Tells Us Little: Duration of Social Media Use does not Influence Sleep Disruption or Psychopathology in Adolescents Running title: Sleep, social media use and mental health in adolescents
01/13/2026
DOI: 10.17077/pp.006789
Abstract
Background: Adolescent mental health problems have risen alongside increasing sleep disruption and widespread social media use (SMU). However, the mechanisms linking these factors remain unclear. This study concurrently examined objectively measured sleep and SMU in relation to psychopathology to test whether SMU moderates the sleep–mental health association and to characterize day-to-day bidirectional relations among sleep, affect, mood, and SMU during the school year.
Methods: Eighty-five adolescents (ages 12–18) completed 14 days of wrist actigraphy, smartphone-based ecological momentary assessments of mood and aGect, and objective SMU duration tracking. Cross-sectional models tested whether SMU moderated associations between sleep and psychopathology, and multilevel daily models examined within-person lagged associations among sleep, SMU, and aGect, controlling for age and sex. False discovery rate correction was applied.
Results: Shorter average sleep duration and greater variability in sleep duration between weekdays and weekends were associated with higher psychopathology symptoms, primarily externalizing problems. SMU duration neither moderated nor directly predicted psychopathology or sleep. Within-person analyses showed that longer-than-usual sleep predicted more positive and less negative affect and lower next-day SMU, though these associations did not survive correction for multiple comparisons
Conclusions: Sleep disruption showed consistent associations with adolescent psychopathology, whereas the amount of time spent on social media did not. These findings suggest that duration-based measures of SMU may poorly capture digital risk and highlight the need for more granular, context-sensitive indicators of online behavior in understanding youth mental health.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- When "Time Online" Tells Us Little: Duration of Social Media Use does not Influence Sleep Disruption or Psychopathology in Adolescents Running title: Sleep, social media use and mental health in adolescents
- Creators
- Morgan Lott - University of IowaSophia Koesterer - University of IowaEleanor Mackellar - University of IowaAmanda McCleery - University of Iowa, Iowa Neuroscience InstituteGerta Bardhoshi - University of Iowa, Counselor EducationJonathan M Platt - University of Iowa, EpidemiologyBengi Baran (Author) - University of Iowa, Psychological and Brain Sciences
- Resource Type
- Preprint
- DOI
- 10.17077/pp.006789
- Number of pages
- 33 pages
- Copyright
- Copyright © the authors
- Language
- English
- Date posted
- 01/13/2026
- Academic Unit
- Psychiatry; Epidemiology; Psychological and Brain Sciences; Iowa Neuroscience Institute; Counselor Education; Anesthesia; Injury Prevention Research Center
- Record Identifier
- 9985115470202771
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