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The Impact of Shallow Reading in Social Media

T

Tang-Du Hospital

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Social Media
Mental Health Disorder
Brain Imaging

Treatments

Behavioral: smartphone related behaviors

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05097807
202103129

Details and patient eligibility

About

Social media is pervasively used in our life. There is a research hypothesis that the information in social media is "shallow" and the long-term use of it will cause readers' addiction, insomnia, and inability to pay attention, thus reducing the efficiency of learning and working. However, there is no systematic study on the relationship between "shallow reading" in social media and attention, addiction, sleep quality, and other mental health. Therefore, the investigators intend to explore the effect of "shallow reading" in social media on mental health based on about 300 healthy subjects by conducting questionnaire, cognitive scale assessment, multi-mode MRI scanning and EEG monitoring. A cross-sectional study will be combined with a longitudinal study to explore the clinical characteristics its relationship to brain function.

Full description

With the development of social media such as "twitter", "Facebook" and "Microblog", "shallow reading" has gradually become the main way for people to obtain external information and relax. "Shallow reading" is characterized by incomplete and intermittent reading patterns, and readers often "dip into it" without thinking. There is a research hypothesis that the information in social media is "shallow" and the long-term use of it will cause readers' addiction, insomnia, and inability to pay attention, thus reducing the efficiency of learning and working. Some researchers even concern that "shallow reading" is destroying human beings' suspicion spirit, thinking ability and rational thinking which are based on writing and print culture. However, there is no systematic study on the relationship between "shallow reading" and attention or other mental health, not to mention its fMRI and EEG characteristics. Therefore, the investigators intend to explore the effect of "shallow reading" in social media on mental health based on about 300 healthy subjects by conducting questionnaire, cognitive scale assessment, multi-mode MRI scanning and EEG monitoring. A cross-sectional study will be combined with a longitudinal study to better understand both the short-term and long-term effect of "shallow reading" habit to the mental health and imaging characteristics. The collected indexes will be analyzed to explore the clinical characteristics of people with the habit of "shallow reading", and its relationship to mental health, brain imaging characteristics will finally be clarified.

Enrollment

300 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Health volunteers
  2. Capable to use smartphone

Exclusion criteria

  1. Participants with a BMI greater than 30 or less than 18.5
  2. Any use of cigarettes or alcohol
  3. Color blindness
  4. Left-handedness
  5. With mental or psychiatric disorders
  6. With cognitive impairment
  7. Has a history of brain trauma
  8. Has a family history of psychiatric disorders

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

300 participants in 4 patient groups

The impact of word-picture-based shallow reading in social media
Experimental group
Description:
Use Microblog on their smartphone, a word-picture-based social media service similar to twitter.
Treatment:
Behavioral: smartphone related behaviors
The impact of short video-based shallow reading in social media
Experimental group
Description:
Use Tiktok on their smartphone, a short video-based social media service.
Treatment:
Behavioral: smartphone related behaviors
The impact of full-length sci-fi novel reading
Active Comparator group
Description:
Read a full-length sci-fi novel (Three body) on their own smartphone.
Treatment:
Behavioral: smartphone related behaviors
The impact of film/TV series
Active Comparator group
Description:
Watch a film on their own smartphone.
Treatment:
Behavioral: smartphone related behaviors

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Guangbin Cui, MD & PhD; Wen Wang, MD & PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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