A large Stanford randomized trial paid over 35,000 users to deactivate Facebook or Instagram for six weeks, revealing small but measurable gains in happiness and reductions in depression and anxiety—especially notable for women under 25 on Instagram.
The findings highlight how engineered digital environments subtly affect mood without dramatic offline substitutions, inviting deeper reflection on attention, comparison, and habit.
We explore the nuances of effect sizes, subgroup differences, and what an upcoming year-long screen-free personal experiment might teach us about mental recalibration in the digital age.

Psychology Tidbits

Circle Of Insight Productions

The Screen Trap: What a Massive Experiment Reveals About Our Digital Habits

APR 19, 20264 MIN
Psychology Tidbits

The Screen Trap: What a Massive Experiment Reveals About Our Digital Habits

APR 19, 20264 MIN

Description

A large Stanford randomized trial paid over 35,000 users to deactivate Facebook or Instagram for six weeks, revealing small but measurable gains in happiness and reductions in depression and anxiety—especially notable for women under 25 on Instagram.
The findings highlight how engineered digital environments subtly affect mood without dramatic offline substitutions, inviting deeper reflection on attention, comparison, and habit.
We explore the nuances of effect sizes, subgroup differences, and what an upcoming year-long screen-free personal experiment might teach us about mental recalibration in the digital age.