Cemiloglu, D., Alshakhsi, S., Babiker, A., Naiseh, M., Al-Thani, D. and Ali, R., 2025. Social Media Vs. Users’ Wellbeing and the Role of Personal Factors: A Study on Arab and British Samples. International Journal of Human-Computer Interaction. (In Press)
Full text available as:
![]() |
PDF
Manuscript_Preprint.pdf - Accepted Version Restricted to Repository staff only until 3 April 2026. Available under License Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial. 912kB |
Copyright to original material in this document is with the original owner(s). Access to this content through BURO is granted on condition that you use it only for research, scholarly or other non-commercial purposes. If you wish to use it for any other purposes, you must contact BU via BURO@bournemouth.ac.uk. Any third party copyright material in this document remains the property of its respective owner(s). BU grants no licence for further use of that third party material. |
DOI: 10.1080/10447318.2025.2480909
Abstract
This article explores the multifaceted relationship between social media use and individual wellbeing (SM-WB). It focuses on personality traits, locus of control, social media competency, and cultural backgrounds. An online survey was conducted with 281 Arabs (141 females) and 281 British (155 females). Analyses revealed significant differences: Arabs exhibited higher belief in social media's positive impact on wellbeing, consistent across various wellbeing dimensions measured through a customized PERMA scale. Regression analysis identified significant predictors of SM-WB—social media competency, conscientiousness, agreeableness, neuroticism, and internal locus of control—for both samples, while females reported higher SM-WB than males. Age was a significant predictor exclusively in the British sample, whereas extraversion predicted SM-WB only in the Arab sample. Qualitative findings regarding future social media design to enhance wellbeing revealed several similarities between samples; however, some themes differed in their specifics, underscoring culture’s nuanced impact on social media developmental requirements for improving wellbeing.
Item Type: | Article |
---|---|
ISSN: | 1044-7318 |
Uncontrolled Keywords: | Social media; wellbeing; digital wellbeing; personality; social media design |
Group: | Faculty of Science & Technology |
ID Code: | 41040 |
Deposited By: | Symplectic RT2 |
Deposited On: | 14 May 2025 12:40 |
Last Modified: | 14 May 2025 12:40 |
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Repository Staff Only - |