Handbook of adolescent digital media use and mental health / edited by Jacqueline Nesi, Brown University, [Rhode Island], Eva H. Telzer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Mitchell J. Prinstein, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Contributor(s): Nesi, Jacqueline [editor.] | Telzer, Eva H [editor.] | Prinstein, Mitchell J [editor.]
Language: English Publisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, [2022]Publisher: ©2022Description: xv, 437 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781108838726; 1108838723; 9781108972277; 1108972276Subject(s): Internet and teenagers -- Psychological aspects | Mass media and teenagers -- Psychological aspects | Digital media -- Psychological aspects | Teenagers -- Mental health | Adolescent psychology | Psychology, Adolescent | Teenagers -- Mental healthGenre/Form: electronic books.DDC classification: 004.67/80835 LOC classification: HQ799.2.I5 | H36 2022Other classification: PSY007000 Online resources: Full text is available at the Directory of Open Access Books. Click here to view.| Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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COLLEGE LIBRARY | COLLEGE LIBRARY | 004.67/80835 (Browse shelf) | Not for loan |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Introduction -- Part I theoretical and Methodological Foundations in Digital Media Research and Adolescent Mental Health -- Methodological and Conceptual issues in Digital Media Research / Kaveri Subrahmanyam and Minas Michikyan -- Theoretical Foundations of Social Media Uses and Effects / Patti M. Valkenburg -- Part II Digital Media in the Adolescent Development Context -- Digital Media and the Dual Aspect of Adolescent Identity Development: The Effects of Digital Media Use on Adolescents Identity Development: The Effects of Digital Media Use on Adolescents' Commitments and Self-Stories / Hiromitsu Morita, Nastasia Griffioen and Isabela Granic -- Peer Relationship Processes in the Context of Digital Media / Samuel E. Ehrenreich -- Digital Media and the Developing brain / Michelle Chiu and Jason Chein -- Adolescents' Digital Media Interactions within the Context of Sexuality Development / Chelly Maes, Johanna M. F. van Oosten and Laura Vandenbosch -- Culture and Digital Media in Adolescent Development / Adriana M. Manago and Jessica McKenzie -- Marginalized and Understudied Populations Using Digital Media /4rLinda Charmaraman, J. Maya Hernandez and Rachel Hodes; 9. Depression and anxiety in the context of digital media Megan A. Moreno and Anna F. Jolliff; 10. The role of digital media in adolescents' body image and disordered eating Savannah R. Roberts, Anne J. Maheux, Brianna A. Ladd and Sophia Choukas-Bradley; 11. Digital media in adolescent health-risk and externalizing behaviors Michaeline Jensen, Mariani Weinstein, Morgan T. Brown and Jessica Navarro; 12. Problematic digital media use and addiction Sarah E. Domoff, Aubrey L. Borgen, Bonny Rye, Gloria Rojas Barajas and Katie Avery; 13. The effects of digital media and media multitasking on attention problems and sleep Susanne E. Baumgartner; 14. Digital media, suicide, and self-injury Kaylee Payne Kruzan and Janis Whitlock; 15. School-based initiatives promoting digital citizenship and healthy digital media use Emily Weinstein and Carrie James; 16. Digital media interventions for adolescent mental health Jessica L. Hamilton, David M. Siegel and Matthew M. Carper.
"The experience of contemporary adolescents is one that differs profoundly from that of earlier generations. Research on adolescence has also endured substantial change, and the concept of change is central to the topics addressed in this handbook. Change, for example, is key to the very definition of adolescence as a developmental time period marked by rapid physical, social, and psychological transformation. Accumulating evidence in developmental neuroscience over the past decades reveals a complexity of change not previously understood. Mental health is also an evolving concept - both in definition and in practice - with our understanding of what constitutes "good" mental health subject to fluctuating societal norms and stigmas, emerging diagnostic categories and dimensions, and increasing prevalence rates. Yet perhaps most closely tied to the concept of change is digital media - inextricably linked with evolution, adaptation, transformation. To understand digital media is to recognize and wrestle with a constantly evolving phenomenon - an entity that changes within a world that changes around it, both as a cause and a consequence of it"-- Provided by publisher.
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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