Published December 30, 2025 | Version v1
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Social Media Use Intensity, Social Comparison, and Mental Burden: Evidence from a Online Survey with a Conditional Process Model

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Social media use has been repeatedly associated with adverse mental health outcomes, yet effect heterogeneity suggests that psychological mechanisms and boundary conditions require more precise specification. This study tested a conditional process model in which social media use intensity (SMN) was associated with mental burden (MB) indirectly via social comparison (SV), and self-compassion (SMG) was examined as a moderator of the SV → MB association. Data were collected via a fully online survey recruited through Reddit and relevant subreddits (N = 120). All constructs were assessed using Likert-type composite scores (1–5). Regression-based conditional process analyses indicated a strong indirect effect of SMN on MB through SV, supporting social comparison as a central explanatory pathway linking social media engagement to experienced burden. Self-compassion showed strong negative associations with SV and MB, consistent with its role as a general resilience factor; however, the SV × SMG interaction was small and did not conform to a straightforward buffering pattern in this dataset, underscoring the importance of measurement considerations and replication with multi-method designs. Overall, the findings support mechanism-focused models of social media effects that prioritize social comparison processes and highlight self-compassion as a clinically relevant correlate of lower burden, while cautioning against overly simple protective interpretations in cross-sectional self-report data.

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