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Change in Social Media Use and Well-being Among College Students Receiving a Two-week Exercise or Mindfulness Intervention

Change in Social Media Use and Well-being Among College Students Receiving a Two-week Exercise or Mindfulness Intervention

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

The investigators will be randomizing 300 college student participants with high levels of social media use into either a 1) control condition (no intervention), a 2) mindfulness meditation cognitive intervention, or 3) a social media reduction + exercise replacement intervention. Participants complete intervention activities daily for two weeks. The investigators will collect self-report and behavioral measures of social media use and related psychological constructs at three time points: baseline, immediately after the intervention period, and one-week after the intervention period (three weeks from baseline).

Description

The objective of this study is to test two cognitive and behavioral interventions designed to reduce social media use and improve psychological constructs related to social media use in a sample of university students. The cognitive intervention is a mindfulness meditation exercise taken from the Calm app focused around gratitude and stress management. Each meditation takes approximately 15 minutes to complete and is to be done daily for two week. The second behavioral intervention is asking participants to reduce social media use for 30 minutes daily for two weeks and replacing that time with physical exercise of the participants' choosing.

Aim 1: Compare psychological constructs related to mental health (well-being, stress, depression, anxiety, loneliness, social comparisons, etc.) before and after conducting two social media use interventions over two weeks, compared to a control condition (no intervention).

Aim 2: Compare self-reported and behavioral (smartphone screenshots of social media use screentime) measures of social media use before and after two social media use interventions over two weeks, compared to a control condition (no intervention).

Aim 3: Examine mental health and social media use one week after the intervention period is complete (3-week follow up) or testing whether the interventions have effects beyond the intervention period.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • The participant is 18 or older.
  • The participant must be a Johns Hopkins University student.
  • Owning an iPhone or Android smartphone, with frequent use of social media use daily (>

    1 hour)

  • Enabling and sharing screenshots of the participant's smartphone use metrics, including number of last-week pickups, notifications received, and average screen time.
  • Providing consent to participate.
  • Only exercising 1 hour or less daily, on average.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • younger than 18
  • Not a Johns Hopkins University Student
  • Doesn't own a smart phone
  • Uses smartphone less than 1 hour daily
  • Exercises more than 1 hour daily

Study details
    Social Media Addiction
    Anxiety
    Depression Disorder
    Wellbeing

NCT07097545

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

15 October 2025

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