Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
879334 | Current Opinion in Psychology | 2016 | 6 Pages |
•Facebook use has recently been linked to depression and negative affectivity.•Unflattering social comparison and envy are common experiences for Facebook users.•Envy and social comparison mediate correlations between Facebook use and depression.•Facebook research sheds new light on the relationship between envy and depression.•Further experiments and experience sampling should corroborate causal links.
In their Facebook profiles, users communicate abundant social comparison information conveying mainly positive self-portrayals. Thereby, social networking sites like Facebook provide a fertile ground for envy. This has been proposed as a mechanism for the potential negative effects of Facebook use on well-being and depression. This article reviews research on this process. Studies show that (especially passive) Facebook use indeed predicts different measures of social comparison as well as envy. In several studies social comparison or envy mediate a positive association between Facebook use and undesirable affective outcomes such as depression. However, causal relationships have not yet been sufficiently established. Methodological and conceptual variety across studies limits their comparability, but reveals viable ideas for future research.