The Bad Science Behind Jonathan Haidt's Call to Regulate Social Media
Only 22 of the 476 studies in The Anxious Generation contain data on either heavy social media use or serious mental issues among adolescents, and none have data on both.
HD DownloadIn his 1996 book, The Vision of the Anointed, economist Thomas Sowell sketched out a pattern that many of the "crusading movements" of the 20th century have followed. First, they identify a "great danger" to society, followed by an "urgent need" for government action "to avert impending catastrophe."
A new book by psychologist and author Jonathan Haidt, The Anxious Generation, argues that the government must regulate social media because it's causing a teen mental health crisis. Haidt is, in many ways, a model researcher because of his rigor, transparency, and openness to dissent. On this issue, however, he fits neatly into Sowell's framework.
Those best equipped to get attention from the government and the media are the most "articulate" people, Sowell observes, and they often reference opaque studies without explaining them. And Haidt is certainly articulate—his book is well-written and filled with compelling insights. But he claims far too much certainty for his views, based on research that is mostly junk. And he advocates for restrictive government policies without doing the simple tests that might support or disprove their value.
Academic studies often make use of statistical techniques that are hard for the average person to decipher, which is a shame because "most published research findings are false," as Stanford's John Ioannidis argued in a 2005 paper. Ioannidis wasn't just referencing the many scandals of fabricated data, conscious or unconscious bias, and misrepresented findings. Even top researchers at elite institutions have been guilty of statistical malpractice. Peer review is worse than useless, better at enforcing conventional wisdom and discouraging skepticism than weeding out substandard or fraudulent work. Academics face strong pressure to publish flawed research. Few have the skill and drive to produce high-quality publications at the rate required by university hiring and tenure review committees. Even the best researchers resort to doing some easy, low-quality studies. Bad studies tend to be the most newsworthy and the most policy-relevant.
Many of the papers Haidt compiled contained coding errors, inappropriate statistics, and other issues. Most downloaded some data of little relevance—either cheap to generate, like surveying your sophomore psychology students, or data collected for a different purpose—and analyzed it with an off-the-shelf statistical approach.
Haidt cites 476 studies in his book that seem to represent an overwhelming case. But two-thirds of them were published before 2010, or before the period that Haidt focuses on in the book. Only 22 of them have data on either heavy social media use or serious mental issues among adolescents, and none have data on both.
There are a few good studies cited in the book. For example, one co-authored by psychologist Jean Twenge uses a large and carefully selected sample with a high response rate. It employs exploratory data analysis rather than cookbook statistical routines.
Unfortunately for Haidt, that study undercuts his claim. The authors did find that heavy television watchers, video game players, and computer and phone users were less happy. But the similar graphs for these four ways of spending time suggest that the specific activity didn't matter. This study actually suggests that spending an excessive amount of time in front of any one type of screen is unhealthy—not that there's anything uniquely dangerous about social media.
An example of a bad study that Haidt cites in his book is one that paid $15 each to 1,787 self-selected internet respondents, aged 19 to 32, to answer 15 minutes' worth of questions online. Few were likely to have been teenage girls, and there's no reason to expect any were depressed teenage girls who used social media. In fact, I couldn't find any studies in Haidt's compendium that spent substantive time interviewing any depressed teenage girls or heavy social media users.
Another study that uses low-quality data was based on surveys of 143 University of Pennsylvania students, who participated for psychology course credit. Undergraduate psychology students at an elite university are hardly a representative sample of the population. The authors seem to have made significant coding and random assignment errors.
Haidt cites 17 studies he considers to be longitudinal that either find no effect or an effect in the opposite direction of his claim, and only four were true longitudinal studies, meaning they analyzed the same group of people at different times to see how changes at one time, like increased social media use, were associated with future changes, like more depression. One of the studies on Haidt's list contradicted his claim, finding that depression occurs before social media use, not the other way around.
Practically all of the studies Haidt cited either have major methodological errors or didn't say what he claimed. I doubt many of the senators on the Judiciary Committee or members of their staff, to whom Haidt claimed an "urgent need" for government action, read the underlying papers. The fact that Haidt cites a lot of studies just makes the problem worse. Errors cascade; they don't cancel each other out.
Even the best studies Haidt relies upon have the fatal flaw of not studying the subject. You can't establish the effect of heavy social media use on teenage girl depression unless you study heavy social media users and depressed teenage girls. None of the studies do this. Instead they study mostly adults, mostly average social media users, without serious psychological issues.
When Haidt moves on to policy, a different kind of study is called for. If you want to ban phones in schools, study kids who went to phone-free schools vs. a control group of kids who were allowed to use phones in school. Even this would only tell you average effects, but at least showing the change is positive on average is a step toward testing your hypothesis.
To be fair, Haidt does have some solid policy proposals that don't suffer from this flaw. When he argues that governments should stop criminalizing free play or that internet companies should insist on more reliable age-verification measures, which parents are requesting, he doesn't need studies.
When Haidt first presented his argument on Substack, I critiqued the studies he cited, and he responded by suggesting that I have impossibly high standards for proof and that the consensus of hundreds of researchers studying related issues is strong enough to justify policy actions. My objection is that the researchers whose work Haidt relies on didn't bother to talk to teenagers who are heavy social media users and who are in treatment for depression. Based on poor quality studies, he wants the government to dictate to parents how to raise their children, overruling the judgments of those who are intimately acquainted with the individuals involved.
Some have argued that it's obvious that social media is causing depression in teenage girls. It may be a contributing factor, but the purpose of social science research is not to confirm but to challenge our knee-jerk assumptions, because reality is so complicated. The proper scientific approach is to try to falsify your hypothesis.
If you are going to recommend new laws to regulate social media, as Haidt has, you need to consider the likelihood that your intervention isn't going to yield the effect you want.
There's a tendency among the anointed, Sowell observes, to see "little standing between intention and result." But the real world is "a system of innumerable and reciprocal interactions, all constrained within the confines of natural and human limitations." Often "individual problems cannot be solved one by one without adding to other problems elsewhere."
As any parent knows, children are complex human beings. Policies designed to control their behaviors don't often yield the results we expect. Even if we knew social media use caused depression, we wouldn't know the effect of policies that restrict social media use.
We know alcohol leads to many catastrophic problems, but that doesn't tell us how to regulate youth drinking. If we stop adolescents from using social media, we don't know what they'll do instead, and it might be more harmful.
There's no doubt that social media has significant effects, positive and negative, on the mental health of many young people. Dealing with this is one of the challenges modern parents must face.
But Sowell's anointed class of academics seem happy to impose coercive solutions on evidence that takes a one-size-fits-all approach and that they wouldn't rely upon for their own troubled teenage daughters.
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Teens have always been, and always will be , fucked up in the head.
Teens tend to be depressed because they are in a confusing time of life, not yet considered adults but also not considered kids. They react by becoming moody and difficult. They then seek some distraction, like video games, music, internet sites, etc...
People mix up the symptom with the disease when it comes to teenagers.
People mix up the symptom with the disease when it comes to teenagers.
^
It's amazing how quickly people forget this. I'm sure all of us of a certain age remember the commercials from the '80s with the scare-voice going "is your child suddenly moody and depressed? Are they keeping secrets from you? Are they making new friends and doing weird things like dying their hair or having multiple piercings? They're DEFINITELY ON DRUGS AND CAREUNIT CAN HELP!1!"
Or . . . they're teenagers?
It's kind of the same way each new generation of middle-aged people is shocked and stunned to learn that people in their 20s are flakey and narcissistic.
Lazy parents look for excuses as to why their kids are fucked up. Drugs, sex, rock and roll... whatever.
Funny story. My mother is real good at editing her memories and demanding everyone else follow what she calls her recollection of events. One night we were visiting and playing scrabble. She went of on how she didn't get why kids did drugs and blah blah blah. I stayed quiet as she accidentally came close to saying it's the parents fault until she recalled my Class 4 Felony conviction for selling weed. Then she blamed other kids peer pressuring kids into doing drugs and to my face blamed an old friend of mine who is DEAD for why I started doing drugs. That was total bullshit as me and that friend of mine never smoked a cigarette together much less any weed. He was the one guy who stood up for me to the bullies in school. I was pissed.
A few months earlier my son and his buddies had gone hunting with my brother. My nephew is a professional alcoholic and he managed to get my son so wasted he couldn't walk at all. His buddies, John and Nick, carried him in and helped him with puking. My mother decided that John was a fucking Saint. She couldn't stop talking about how great he was.
He's the guy who smokes weed with my son. He provides the weed. He's is exactly what my mother considers a bad kid. I was going to drop that bomb on her but I figured my son didn't need the ration of shit he would get over it.
So yeah, parents making excuses and forgetting what it was like to be a teenager again.
can someone explain to me why it’s ok if the state restricts porn sales in the real world based on age verification but not online? Same for alcohol. How is requiring age verification for porn/social media tyrannical online but ok in the real world?
"Age verification" is just code for identifying and tracking dissidents, slaver.
“Studies show…” precedes every bit of bullshit that proceeds to regulation.
Very true. Proof is in the egg. Incredible, Edible Egg was a campaign used for a while in between supposed studies that either the yolk or the white was not good for you. The eggs food value seems to change every few years all based on worthless studies.
Is there a study that shows this? (I’m sorry but I couldn't resist)
If there ain't cherry pickin' there ain't science.
“Peer review is worse than useless, better at enforcing conventional wisdom and discouraging skepticism than weeding out substandard or fraudulent work.”
This should be tattooed on Haidt’s forehead – backwards so he can read it in the mirror. More importantly, most HONEST scientific research is NEGATIVE (as opposed to false) but the negative results are never cited by other researchers even though they are arguably more important than the positive outcomes. No one wants to publish negative results because it doesn't build your career or win new grant money.
"most HONEST scientific research is NEGATIVE (as opposed to false)"
The only study praised as being good in the article found that time spend on social media led to unhappiness among the users.
I don’t understand what point you’re trying to make. Just because someone praised a study doesn’t mean they understood it … or the potential pitfalls of reversing cause with effect. It’s more likely that time spent on social media was caused by unhappiness. Either way, if you’re unhappy spending time on social media, why would you continue? And by the way, how did they define and measure “unhappiness?” Did you read the study cited? Do you feel confident that self-reported “happiness” is a reliable statistic?
"I don’t understand what point you’re trying to make."
I am repeating part of the article. The author, who is otherwise skeptical of Haidt's claims, calls a cited study 'good,' even though it shows excessive time spent on social media leads to unhappiness. It's a little counterintuitive as the drift of the article is to debunk Haidt's work, yet cites a source that bolsters it.
"Either way, if you’re unhappy spending time on social media, why would you continue?"
It could be addiction, a condition that causes people to repeat behavior even though they know on a rational level that the behavior is bad. Gambling and drug use are other examples. I haven't read the study, as you've surmised, and I don't feel inclined to. Not everyone has the same level of self control or the same ability to defer gratification. Young people seem particularly prone in this regard. (I should note that none of this is 'science,' but social science, and there is a lot more room for quibbling as the results will never be as clear cut as we'd like.)
"And by the way, how did they define and measure “unhappiness?”
Don't the subjects self report? Assuming they are familiar with English, I have no problem with this. The subjects are the best to judge and report their interior feelings.
“Some have argued that it’s obvious that social media is causing depression in teenage girls.”
There was a time when teenagers communicated with a small group of other teens who were geographically close because there were no cell phones to text with or internet platforms to communicate with a much wider audience. Naturally a kid with the typical negative self-image will find a much larger group of people to taunt her anonymously because of this. So it is possible to imagine that this has an amplification effect. But until someone does a properly designed scientific study that teases out cause and effect – a VERY difficult thing to do! – we should be very skeptical.
Naturally a kid with the typical negative self-image will find a much larger group of people to taunt her anonymously because of this.
^
Being in possession of a teenaged daughter myself, I can say, anecdotally, that the kids I know who have problems are the same sorts of kids who have always been around, having problems, but the depressed kid neglected by their parents who turns to social media to fill that void winds up worse off than that same kid from 30 years ago who was merely desperately lonely rather than desperately lonely and fed a constant stream of syndromes and abuse.
Right and I do wonder how many of these comments come from people with teenage daughters like you and I do. Also anecdotal but I know you will be believe me on this. At least half of my 19 year old daughter's friends have self diagnosed ADHD and/or autism. My daughter will be the first to admit that they are getting all of their info from social media followed by internet searches. I have not read Haidt's new book yet but people who think that social media has a minor impact on kids have their heads buried in the sand.
Almost as well supported as catastrophic climate change!
"The authors did find that heavy television watchers, video game players, and computer and phone users were less happy. But the similar graphs for these four ways of spending time suggest that the specific activity didn't matter. This study actually suggests that spending an excessive amount of time in front of any one type of screen is unhealthy"
Television, video games, phones are all regulated by the government already. Apparently spending excessive amounts of time on them is unhealthy. Social media is also unhealthy for the same reasons.
Years ago it was assumed that to bring up a child capable of living in the real world, it required what was called "building character". In essence, this meant helping a child develop the ability to judge for themselves and be relatively immune to social pressures. Granted, this was to resist the child's peers, not the church or whatever local organizations existed, but it did develop some capacity for resistance. "If all of your friends jumped off a bridge, does that mean that you have to jump too?
This attitude towards children has evaporated leaving little residue. However, while teenagers have always, to some extent, been controlled by their peers, the loss of "character" has exacerbated the power of peer pressure.
Teenage girls are the group most susceptible to peer pressure (with the exception of corporate CEOs whose submission to their peers is unparalleled, but that's a different problem). Go to the Teen Vogue website and look at the women presented there and then decide if it isn't directly aimed at shaming teenage girls' bodies, the thing that girls are the most shy about.
Bring up your daughters reading "Nancy Drew" instead of "The Lip Balm that Will Make Him Want You" or worse, "How Upper Surgery Can Make You the Man You Really Are".
Well said. But I do take exception to one of your assertions that “Teen Vogue” is directly aimed at shaming teenage girls’ bodies. I’m fairly certain that if you put two websites side by side aimed at teenage girls – one with the ideally perfect supermodels wearing gorgeous outfits, and the other with a normal range of teenage girl habitus and typical fashions – the girls will overwhelmingly flock to the supermodels to be “shamed.” You have unwittingly switched cause and effect just as the “experts” have! The “shaming” sites are supplying a demand, not carrying out an evil plot to promote teen suicides. But by all means drink the koolaid if it floats your boat.
"Go to the Teen Vogue website and look at the women presented there and then decide if it isn’t directly aimed at shaming teenage girls’ bodies"
I went to Teen Vogue. It's aimed at celebrating celebrity and consumer culture rather than shaming teenagers. Perhaps celebrity and consumer culture are built upon exploiting feelings of personal inadequacy, but we can't really blame the magazine for that. I saw one article about clothing for extra large girls, and an article I read was about the recent popularity of designs of the American West and Navajo culture. It claimed that John Wayne was the star of the spaghetti western trilogy, but otherwise I found nothing terribly wrong with Teen Vogue.
Unfortunately, Jonathan Haidt is trapped in academia-think. He is highly intelligent, hard working and believes in the power of ideas, but that power is reserved only for people that can think. It is the academic's obligation to provide thoughts for the thought-deprived masses.
The average person's thoughts are far more reality oriented than those of academics. When an average person makes a mistake, it can mean anything from a burned dinner to bankruptcy. When an academic makes a mistake in a paper, he issues a "corrigendum" and the consequences are minor.
For liberals, progressives and legislators, words have magic power. They can make reality optional. Words can garner praise from other intellectuals and can garner power for legislators. I'd take someone who can fix his own lawnmower over most academics and over any legislator.
What a crock of shit. The problem is not social media. The problem is public schools and almost all media conspiring to indoctrinate kids. Marxism prospers where it has human misery to exploit. Kids get dosed with the message that every human activity is destructive. Depression is the inevitable result.
Marxism NEVER prospers. Marxism is imposed by violence on the fearful masses. Then it withers and dies because it has nothing to offer the people, after causing much death and destruction in the process of fading.
Those behind the rise in social media are not Marxists. They are Capitalists like Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg. They make their money by selling an audience of 'users' to advertisers.
"Marxism is imposed by violence on the fearful masses. "
It was the Russian monarchy that imposed WWI on the Russians, killing them by the thousands. The only one to have the courage to call for an end to the war was the communist Lenin. The monarchists, the Capitalists, the right wing nationalists, the social democrats all wanted the slaughter to continue.
Those behind the rise in social media are not Marxists.
Why start by arguing against a point that nobody made or even implied? Oh, right, you are apologizing for Marxists...
It wasn't me who first raised the topic of Marxism in a discussion of social media. It was you. I'm responding with a correction. The Bolsheviks only got a foothold in Russia thanks to the mass slaughter unleashed by the monarchists and supported by the nationalist, rightists, and social democrats. Lenin was almost alone in his willingness to end the war. Stalin was skeptical, and Trotsky tried to stymie the negotiations to surrender. Marxism in Russia was a reaction to the violence the state imposed on the populace. Find a book about the subject if you don't believe me.
Well said by someone who knows nothing about what they are talking about ! No social media is not to blame nor are the schools. Media and the commercial society are not so blameless. Filling kids heads with fear and demanding they are nothing without some product is a large part of the problem. That together with holding one sex or race above the other makes kids feel the have little chance of success. Who wouldn't chose to be a woman when they are given every advantage? Every generation has rebelled from their parents, it's a part of growing up and making your own way. You have never read anything by Marx. He stood for justice and equal treatment for all. As for nations not prospering under his ideas look at China and Russia, both are doing much better than we are today.
You have never read anything by Marx. He stood for justice and equal treatment for all. As for nations not prospering under his ideas look at China and Russia, both are doing much better than we are today.
LOL! Things slow over at the Jacobin comments?
Marx was a syphalitic moron who would have died in a gutter if it weren't for Engalls who was the son of a well off factory owner. Engalls paid off his friends bills and made it possible for Marx to write his ramblings down.
It was Capitalism that kept Marx alive and paid to publish his trash.
It is fair for Haidt to want to act on less than perfect information (we all do this in our daily lives)-- as long as that action does not involve state action or national policy. State action is hard to change and usually molded by political signaling, while national policy making exacerbates those problems by being hard to evaluate because alternatives are stamped out.
This piece does a good job of identifying other problems with making national policy on this basis. But I am certainly willing to entertain experiments in policy by local organizations (even local governments!) and take a look at the results.
Ninety-nine percent of the actions government has taken over the last two centuries should not have been taken. The default should always have been for the government to take no action at all unless compelled by an overwhelming emergency that only government could address - and even then with the greatest of trepidation and caution. Instead, politicians for centuries have overwhelming declared emergencies where none existed as an excuse to take the actions that enhanced their personal careers and power with no thought whatever as to the possible consequences, especially the unintended downside. The Constitution actually says this, but the Supreme Court was absent without leave during most of those centuries.
My problem is I never see them criticizing the junk science driving proggy policy, just figures like Haidt. Given their obvious Leftist bias and the fact they don't give a shit about the studies of his allies I can't bother to find a word he says credible and not just political animus and lies.
Why are social science studies necessary for government to be restrained. I can't remember social science research mentioned once in the Federalist papers or any other debate over the constitution.
Haidt doesn't actually call for government regulation. He wants age limitations like we have for many consumer products. I am shocked at how head in the sand people are on this topic. Pre-teen children, mostly girls are self harming in ways they have never ever one before. This is a fact and it correlates exactly with social media on phones 24 hrs a day. What theory do commenters here have?
Agree. I've seen how much of a negative impact social media has had on my teen daughter. The game becomes easier as a parent when the apps regulate themselves and at least age restrict content. They do an absolute shit job of that. I don't want government involved, but so long as these apps are basically being used by all kids there should be some amount of responsibility from the platform and content producers
How do you want to create this responsibility on the part of the platform and content producers to be less harmful towards teenage kids?
Correct and as I said above, I wonder how many people commenting have Gen Z teenage daughters as I do. I'm never big on government involvement but that doesn't mean we should through the baby out with the bath water. Literally half of my 19 year old daughter's friends have self diagnoses themselves with ADHD and/or autism and at times act on that belief. That is absolutely, 100%, social media driven. You said what I said above about heads in the sand.
Social media didn't invent ADHD and "the spectrum," psychiatry did.
"If you want to ban phones in schools, study kids who went to phone-free schools vs. a control group of kids who were allowed to use phones in school." I don't think that would answer the question unless you randomize the students to the two groups. Otherwise, you'd be comparing kids from families that may have chosen a phone-free school to kids from families that didn't, and that could introduce biases that would affect the results.
This article certainly rings true, and it is commendably modestly stated.
This piece actually has some fire that is otherwise almost absent in dreadfully dull Reason.