Nagata Jason M, Memon Zain, Talebloo Jonanne, Li Karen, Low Patrick, Shao Iris Y, Ganson Kyle T, Testa Alexander, He Jinbo, Brindis Claire D, Baker Fiona C
Department of Pediatrics (JM Nagata, Z Memon, J Talebloo, K Li, P Low, IY Shao, and CD Brindis), University of California, San Francisco, Calif.
Department of Pediatrics (JM Nagata, Z Memon, J Talebloo, K Li, P Low, IY Shao, and CD Brindis), University of California, San Francisco, Calif.
Acad Pediatr. 2025 May-Jun;25(4):102784. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2025.102784. Epub 2025 Jan 10.
To describe patterns of social media use, including underage use (under 13 years) and sex differences, in a diverse, national sample of early adolescents in the US.
We analyzed the social media use data in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (2019-2021, Year 3), which includes a national sample of early adolescents in the US. Specifically, using Chi-square and t-tests, we compared social media use patterns across demographic characteristics stratified by age and sex.
In the sample of 10,092 11-to-15-year-old adolescents, 69.5% had at least one social media account; among social media users, the most common platforms were TikTok (67.1%), YouTube (64.7%), and Instagram (66.0%). A majority (63.8%) of participants under 13 years (minimum age requirement) reported social media use. Under-13 social media users had an average of 3.38 social media accounts, with 68.2% having TikTok accounts and 39.0% saying TikTok was the social media site they used the most. Females reported higher use of TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, and Pinterest, while males reported higher use of YouTube and Reddit. Additionally, 6.3% of participants with social media accounts reported having a secret social media account hidden from their parents' knowledge.
Our findings reveal a high prevalence of underage social media use in early adolescence. These findings can inform current policies and legislation aimed at more robust age verification measures, minimum age requirements, and the enhancement of parental controls on social media. Clinicians can counsel about the potential risks of early adolescent social media use.
描述美国不同的全国性青少年早期样本中社交媒体的使用模式,包括未成年人使用情况(13岁以下)及性别差异。
我们分析了青少年大脑认知发展研究(2019 - 2021年,第3年)中的社交媒体使用数据,该研究涵盖了美国全国性的青少年早期样本。具体而言,我们使用卡方检验和t检验,比较了按年龄和性别分层的不同人口统计学特征的社交媒体使用模式。
在10092名11至15岁青少年的样本中,69.5%的人至少拥有一个社交媒体账户;在社交媒体用户中,最常用的平台是TikTok(67.1%)、YouTube(64.7%)和Instagram(66.0%)。13岁以下(最低年龄要求)的参与者中,大多数(63.8%)报告使用过社交媒体。13岁以下的社交媒体用户平均拥有3.38个社交媒体账户,68.2%的人有TikTok账户,39.0%的人表示TikTok是他们使用最多的社交媒体网站。女性报告使用TikTok、Snapchat、Instagram和Pinterest的频率更高,而男性报告使用YouTube和Reddit的频率更高。此外,6.3%拥有社交媒体账户的参与者报告有一个父母不知道的秘密社交媒体账户。
我们的研究结果显示,青少年早期未成年人使用社交媒体的比例很高。这些发现可为当前旨在加强年龄验证措施、最低年龄要求以及增强家长对社交媒体控制的政策和立法提供参考。临床医生可以就青少年早期使用社交媒体的潜在风险提供咨询。