Six propositions for evaluating the evidence.| www.afterbabel.com
Dr. Murthy is right. The evidence of widespread harm to adolescents is now strong.| www.afterbabel.com
The way some researchers use the GWP can explain why they fail to find effects of digital technology on youth mental health| www.afterbabel.com
If so, depression rates should decline in some groups, especially LGB and marginalized teens. But they don't.| www.generationtechblog.com
What the New York Times got (spectacularly) wrong – and why the time for denial is over| www.generationtechblog.com
Kids growing up in close-knit communities where the social ties are thick are more protected from the harms of the phone-based childhood.| www.afterbabel.com
Happiness used to be U-shaped by age, with middle age the least happy. Not anymore. Young people are now the least happy.| www.afterbabel.com
Reflections from a bereaved mother| www.afterbabel.com
Suggestions from Meta whistleblower Arturo Béjar, which could have been implemented long ago| www.afterbabel.com
75,000 UK parents have come together to give their kids a smartphone-free childhood| www.afterbabel.com
Why changes in stigma and self-reporting procedures cannot explain the international decline of adolescent girls’ mental health.| www.afterbabel.com
Two major problems with a review in Nature| www.afterbabel.com
Why girls from wealthy, secular, and individualistic nations were hit hardest.| www.afterbabel.com
This is not just “Kids these days”| www.afterbabel.com
Journalists should stop saying that the evidence is just correlational| www.afterbabel.com
Researchers need to stop using the Global Burden of Disease study when analyzing mental health trends| www.afterbabel.com
Freya India explains how algorithms act as conveyor belts, transporting girls to dark and extreme places| www.afterbabel.com
Only smartphones plus social media can explain the international collapse in the early 2010s.| www.afterbabel.com
Why did mental health fall off a cliff at the same time and in the same way in the USA, The UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand? Part 1 of 3.| www.afterbabel.com
It’s not just anxiety, depression, and self-harm.| www.afterbabel.com
U.S. teens average nearly five hours a day on social media. Personality traits and parental restrictions greatly affect teen social media usage patterns.| Gallup.com