Social media may amplify negative experience for disadvantaged

New York: Far from offering an escape, the negative social interactions that the disadvantaged youth experience in the neighbourhood may get reproduced and even amplified in the social media, new research suggests. “Teens and young adults who are at the margins of society may have experiences in dealing with social media that others don’t. Unfortunately, […]

social media

New York: Far from offering an escape, the negative social interactions that the disadvantaged youth experience in the neighbourhood may get reproduced and even amplified in the social media, new research suggests.

"Teens and young adults who are at the margins of society may have experiences in dealing with social media that others don't. Unfortunately, what we found was that not only do they have to deal with negative social interactions in their neighborhoods, those interactions also seep into their online lives, sometimes in a larger, more problematic, way," said lead researcher Robin Stevens from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing.