Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6230049 Journal of Affective Disorders 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We examined the relationship between depression and Facebook social support.•We focused on two types of Facebook social support; actual and perceived.•Depression was positively correlated with actual support in response to negative disclosure.•Depression was negatively correlated with perceptions of social support.

BackgroundAlthough the relationship between depression and “offline” social support is well established, numerous questions surround the relationship between “online” social support and depression. We explored this issue by examining the social support dynamics that characterize the way individuals with varying levels of depression (Study 1) and SCID-diagnosed clinically depressed and non-depressed individuals (Study 2) interact with Facebook, the world's largest online social network.MethodUsing a novel methodology, we examined how disclosing positive or negative information on Facebook influences the amount of social support depressed individuals (a) actually receive (based on actual social support transactions recorded on Facebook walls) and (b) think they receive (based on subjective assessments) from their Facebook network.ResultsContrary to prior research indicating that depression correlates with less actual social support from “offline” networks, across both studies depression was positively correlated with social support from Facebook networks when participants disclosed negative information (p=.02 in Study 1 and p=.06 in Study 2). Yet, depression was negatively correlated with how much social support participants thought they received from their Facebook networks (p=.005 in Study 1 and p=.001 in Study 2).LimitationsThe sample size was relatively small in Study 2, reflecting difficulties of recruiting individuals with Major Depressive Disorder.ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that an asymmetry characterizes the relationship between depression and different types of Facebook social support and further identify perceptions of Facebook social support as a potential intervention target. (243 words; 250 max)

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