Correlates of Facebook usage patterns: The relationship between passive Facebook use, social anxiety symptoms, and brooding Article

Shaw, AM, Timpano, KR, Tran, TB et al. (2015). Correlates of Facebook usage patterns: The relationship between passive Facebook use, social anxiety symptoms, and brooding . COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 48 575-580. 10.1016/j.chb.2015.02.003

cited authors

  • Shaw, AM; Timpano, KR; Tran, TB; Joormann, J

authors

abstract

  • Facebook (FB)1 is a popular platform for interacting with others to establish or maintain relationships. Compared to other interpersonal exchanges, FB does not require in-person interactions. Therefore, FB may represent an important social sphere for individuals with social anxiety disorder (SAD).2 Examining the relationship between social anxiety symptoms and FB activity could inform future research on the benefits or consequences of FB use in SAD individuals. This study examined the relationship between social anxiety symptoms and different FB usage patterns. We also considered the role of brooding - a known risk factor for SAD. 75 nonclinical FB users completed questionnaires about psychological symptoms, FB usage, and brooding. Greater social anxiety symptoms were associated with spending more time on FB and passively using FB (i.e., viewing other's profiles without interacting). Brooding mediated the relationship between passive FB use and social anxiety symptoms. An alternative model demonstrated that social anxiety symptoms mediated the association between passive FB use and brooding. This study was limited by its cross-sectional, self-report design. Future research should assess FB use with objective, real-time data and use experimental designs. Results have implications for the cognitive-behavioral model of SAD.

publication date

  • January 1, 2015

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 575

end page

  • 580

volume

  • 48