
我们分析了1400万篇Reddit帖子,揭示了我们在谈论心理健康的方式发生了显著变化
We analysed 14 million Reddit posts to reveal a strikin…
Social media platforms are shaping how we collectively think about mental health, a new study shows.
一项新的研究显示,社交媒体平台正在塑造我们集体看待心理健康的方式。
More people are relying on social media – such as TikTok, Instagram, YouTube and Reddit – to learn about mental health conditions and to interact with people who have shared experiences.
越来越多的人依赖社交媒体——例如 TikTok、Instagram、YouTube 和 Reddit——来了解心理健康状况,并与有相似经历的人互动。
These aren’t only long-familiar disorders such as depression, anxiety and schizophrenia. They also include conditions often placed under the “neurodivergent” umbrella such as autism, ADHD (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder) , Tourette syndrome and dyslexia.
这些不只是长期已知的障碍,例如抑郁症、焦虑症和精神分裂症。它们还包括常被归类在“神经多样性”范围内的状况,例如自闭症、ADHD(注意力缺陷多动障碍)、图雷特综合征和阅读障碍。
For instance, on TikTok the hashtag #adhd has had more than 50 billion views.
例如,在TikTok上,#adhd 这个标签的观看次数超过了500亿。
We wanted to explore how social media platforms shape how we understand mental health. So we analysed more than 14 million posts and comments about mental health on Reddit.
我们想探索社交媒体平台如何塑造我们对心理健康的理解。因此,我们分析了Reddit上超过1400万条关于心理健康的帖子和评论。
We show a shift in conversations toward ADHD and autism, and away from anxiety and depression.
我们发现对话的焦点正从焦虑和抑郁转向了ADHD和自闭症。
Our findings have important implications for how people make sense of, and seek help for, mental health problems.
我们的研究结果对人们如何理解和寻求心理健康问题的帮助具有重要的意义。
A complex relationship
复杂的关联
Social media coverage of mental health has made it more visible, with some positive effects. It has probably reduced the stigma of mental illness and increased the use of mental health services.
社交媒体对心理健康的报道使其更具可见性,并带来了一些积极影响。它可能降低了精神疾病的污名化,并增加了心理健康服务的使用。
However, it also has downsides. It can induce or exacerbate eating disorders, can contribute to the spread of symptoms (such as tic-like behaviours) , and has been attributed to the rise of questionable self-diagnoses.
然而,它也有缺点。它可能会诱发或加剧饮食失调,可能助长症状的传播(例如抽动行为),并且被归因于可疑的自我诊断的增加。
Misinformation is common in social media discussions of mental health. One study found a majority of the most popular TikTok videos on ADHD were misleading. Inaccurate information about many other mental health conditions on social media is common.
心理健康在社交媒体讨论中充斥着错误信息。一项研究发现,大多数关于ADHD最受欢迎的TikTok视频都是误导性的。关于许多其他心理健康状况的不准确信息在社交媒体上很常见。
Discussions change and evolve
讨论不断变化和演变
Mental health content has not merely risen in volume. Some conditions have increasingly attracted the spotlight, others have receded from view, and the relationships among them have shifted.
心理健康内容不仅仅是增加了数量。一些疾病越来越受到关注,一些则逐渐淡出视野,它们之间的关系也发生了变化。
In our Reddit study published last year, we found that as the largest ADHD- and autism- related communities (subreddits) became increasingly more prominent from 2012 to 2022, their content gradually became more similar, and their users increasingly overlapped.
在我们去年发表的Reddit研究中,我们发现,从2012年到2022年,随着最大的ADHD和自闭症相关社区(子版块)日益突出,它们的内容逐渐变得更加相似,用户群体也日益重叠。
Discussions in both communities increasingly emphasised the experiences of adults, challenges in accessing diagnostic assessments, and struggles with personal relationships.
这两个社区的讨论越来越强调成年人的经历、获取诊断评估的挑战以及个人人际关系上的挣扎。
This growing convergence of these two conditions on Reddit illustrates how social media can reshape representations of mental health.
在Reddit上,这两种状况日益趋同,说明了社交媒体如何重塑心理健康的表征。
Our latest study takes this further
我们最新的研究将此推向了更深层次。
In our new study, we analysed more than 14 million posts and comments from several of the largest mental health communities on Reddit.
在我们的新研究中,我们分析了来自Reddit上几个最大的心理健康社区的超过1400万篇帖子和评论。
The 14 communities we studied included those related to mood, anxiety, trauma, personality, dissociation and psychosis, as well as those focused on conditions often placed under the “neurodivergent” umbrella, such as autism, ADHD, Tourette syndrome and dyslexia.
我们研究的14个社区包括与情绪、焦虑、创伤、人格、解离和精神病相关的社区,以及关注常被归类为“神经多样性”范围内的疾病的社区,例如自闭症、ADHD、图雷特综合征和阅读障碍。
We investigated how the people belonging to these communities and the language they used changed from 2015 to 2022.
我们调查了这些社区的成员及其使用的语言是如何从2015年到2022年变化的。
We explored which communities became more or less closely associated over time – sharing more or fewer members and containing posts and comments with similar or different linguistic content. We also looked at whether these changes reflected shifts in the amount of attention the 14 conditions received.
我们探讨了哪些社区随着时间的推移变得更或更不紧密地关联——共享了更多或更少的成员,并包含具有相似或不同语言内容的帖子和评论。我们还研究了这些变化是否反映了这14种疾病所获得的关注度的转移。
Although our analysis only covered a seven-year period, it revealed a striking pattern of changes. The two diagrams show how the 14 communities were interrelated at the beginning and end of the period.
尽管我们的分析只涵盖了七年时间,但它揭示了一种显著的变化模式。这两张图表显示了这14个社区在时间段开始和结束时的相互关联情况。
The size of the circles represents the relative size of the communities. The width of the links between them indicates how closely they were associated.
圆圈的大小代表了社区的相对规模。它们之间的连接线的宽度表明了它们关联的紧密程度。
In 2015, depression and anxiety were prominent mental health communities on Reddit. They were among the most active and their members and content overlapped with those of many other communities. In this sense, they were “central” to the network.
2015年,抑郁症和焦虑症是Reddit上主要的心理健康社区。它们是最活跃的社区之一,其成员和内容与许多其他社区有所重叠。从这个意义上说,它们是网络“中心”的。
However, in 2022, ADHD and autism communities had become most popular and prominent, displacing depression and anxiety. ADHD, autism and other neurodivergent conditions became more closely associated with other communities, and consequently more central to the network.
然而,到2022年,ADHD和自闭症社区变得最受欢迎和最突出,取代了抑郁症和焦虑症。ADHD、自闭症和其他神经多样性疾病与其它社区联系得更紧密,从而在网络中更具中心性。
These analyses suggest that on Reddit the mental health landscape has been re-configured. Mood and anxiety disorders once dominated discussions. But discussions of mental health have increasingly pivoted to discussing conditions related to being neurodivergent.
这些分析表明,Reddit上的心理健康图景已经重构。情绪和焦虑障碍曾一度主导了讨论。但心理健康的讨论越来越多地转向了讨论与神经多样性相关的疾病。
Reddit users do not represent the general population; they tend to be younger, male, more educated, and have a higher income. Nevertheless, our study offers important insights into changes in mental health discussions on one social media platform over time.
Reddit用户不能代表普通人群;他们倾向于更年轻、男性、受教育程度更高且收入更高。尽管如此,我们的研究还是为了解在一个社交媒体平台上心理健康讨论随时间的变化提供了重要的见解。
Why does it matter?
这有什么关系?
The rising prominence and centrality of ADHD and autism makes them increasingly popular explanations for mental health problems. This might promote accurate self-diagnosis by people who once would not have recognised the nature of their difficulties.
ADHD和自闭症日益突出的重要性和中心地位,使其成为心理健康问题越来越流行的解释。这可能会促使那些以前无法认识到自身困难性质的人进行准确的自我诊断。
However, it could also lead people to misinterpret and mislabel their experiences as ADHD and autism when there’s another explanation.
然而,这也可能导致人们错误地将自身经历误解并贴上ADHD或自闭症的标签,而实际上存在其他解释。
The rising prominence of these conditions on social media may also lead people to interpret mood or anxiety symptoms as signs of ADHD or autism.
这些状况在社交媒体上日益突出的重要性,还可能导致人们将情绪或焦虑症状误解为ADHD或自闭症的迹象。
Misinterpretations can lead people to pursue inappropriate diagnoses or unhelpful treatment, delaying access to the help they need. This in turn places increasing pressure on mental health services, and can lead to other conditions being overlooked.
误解可能导致人们寻求不恰当的诊断或无益的治疗,从而延误了他们获得所需帮助的时机。这反过来给心理健康服务带来了越来越大的压力,并可能导致其他状况被忽视。
Jemima Kang receives funding from an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship, an Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering Elevate Scholarship, and a University of Melbourne Helen Macpherson Smith Scholarship.
Jemima Kang获得了澳大利亚政府研究培训计划奖学金、澳大利亚技术科学与工程学院“提升”奖学金以及墨尔本大学海伦·麦克弗森·史密斯奖学金的资助。
Nick Haslam receives funding from the Australian Research Council.
Nick Haslam获得了澳大利亚研究理事会的资助。
Mike Conway does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Mike Conway不为任何可能从本文中受益的公司或组织工作、提供咨询、拥有股份或接受资金,并且除了其学术任命外,未披露任何相关的隶属关系。

