Posts tagged with Facebook


Thanks to a group of researchers in Norway, people can now measure the severity of their Facebook addiction using the Bergen Facebook Addiction Scale (BFAS). It is thought to be the first time psychologists have formally recognised social media dependency as a real addiction, and the scale is the first of its kind in world.

The BFAS consists of six statements, which users respond to by grading their social network dependency.

The statements are:
• You spend a lot of time thinking about Facebook or planning how to use it
• You feel an urge to use Facebook more and more
• You use Facebook in order to forget about personal problems
• You have tried to cut down on the use of Facebook without success
• You become restless or troubled if you are prohibited from using Facebook
• You use Facebook so much that it has had a negative impact on your job/studies

The possible responses for each statement are as follows: (1) Very rarely, (2) Rarely, (3) Sometimes, (4) Often, and (5) Very often. Scoring ‘often’ or ‘very often’ on at least four of the six items might suggest that you are addicted to Facebook.

After coming up with the BFAS scale, Cecilie Schou Andreassen and her colleagues at the University of Bergen in Norway recruited 227 female and 196 male students to test its effectiveness. They discovered that women were more at risk of developing Facebook addiction than were men, and that it occurs more regularly among younger than older users. They also found that people who are anxious and socially insecure use Facebook more than those with lower scores on those traits, probably because those who are anxious find it easier to communicate via social media than face-to-face. Andreassen’s study shows that the symptoms of Facebook addiction resemble those of drug and alcohol addiction.

“Misery Has More Company Than People Think,” a paper in the January issue of Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, draws on a series of studies examining how college students evaluate moods, both their own and those of their peers. Led by Alex Jordan, who at the time was a Ph.D. student in Stanford’s psychology department, the researchers found that their subjects consistently underestimated how dejected others were–and likely wound up feeling more dejected as a result. Jordan got the idea for the inquiry after observing his friends’ reactions to Facebook: He noticed that they seemed to feel particularly crummy about themselves after logging onto the site and scrolling through others’ attractive photos, accomplished bios, and chipper status updates. “They were convinced that everyone else was leading a perfect life”.

(source)