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Ted Swing's avatar

Media effects research was the primary topic of my graduate research, though this specific area (social media and mental health) wasn't one of the topics I studied. The fact that Ferguson did a meta-analysis, made numerous errors, and obtained the result that a possible media effect is non-significant is extremely unsurprising. He's been doing that for the past 17 years.

Social psychology has faced a reckoning in a number of problems over the past 15 years (p-hacking, replication crisis). Those are tough issues that definitely needed attention from the field. That said, it seems to be a sadly neglected issue that it's quite easy (arguably much easier) to use flawed methods to obtain a non-significant result when one wishes, for whatever reason. This is often followed by the erroneous conclusion that the effect in question therefore doesn't exist. Journal editors and reviewers, in particular, need to be more attentive to this problem. This hurts the field and the public understanding of important issues.

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Tom Swift's avatar

Preventing children from accessing smartphones is well and good, but more ambitious solutions to this problem may be necessary:

https://swiftenterprises.substack.com/p/computational-independence

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