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Hello. This is Six Minute
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English from BBC
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Learning English. I'm Neil. Beth?
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What are you doing? Get off your phone!
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Oh, sorry! And I'm Beth.
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Are you addicted to social media?
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It wouldn't be a surprise.
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With so many different apps out there,
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Snapchat, TikTok, and the latest, Threads,
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it's easy to spend a lot more time on your phone than ever before.
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Yes, I don't think I'm addicted,
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but I definitely spend more time on social media than I'd like to.
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However, there are plenty of studies out there looking
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at how social media affects mental health with some saying
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it can be as addictive as gambling. Research in the US has found
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that adolescents who spend more than three hours a day on social media
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have double the risk of developing depression and anxiety. An adolescent
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is someone aged ten to nineteen,
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between childhood and adulthood. With that in mind,
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it's no wonder parents are worried. To help with this, the US is currently
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in the process of regulating social media apps for teenagers.
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Some scientists think the UK should do the same.
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There has been growing agreement among health experts about
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the negative chronic health effects of social media use on teenagers.
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They have revealed in surveys that social media makes them feel worse
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about their body image and 64% of teens have said
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they are regularly exposed to hate-based content. In this programme,
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we'll be discussing how social media affects teenagers and,
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as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.
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But first I have a question for you, Beth.
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The app Snapchat is a very common way that teenagers communicate these
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days.
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This is partly because messages
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and photos disappear after a certain time period.
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But what percentage of thirteen to twenty-four year olds use Snapchat?
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Is it: a) 70%, b) 80% or c) 90%.
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Hmm, I'll guess 80%.
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OK, Beth. I'll reveal the answer later in the programme.
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A lot of social media platforms, such as TikTok, work
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by showing and suggesting similar accounts and content to those
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someone has already searched for. Professor Devi Sridhar,
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the Chair of global public health
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at the University of Edinburgh, thinks this can be concerning, as she told
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BBC World Service Programme,
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Inside Science. And this
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is worrying, for example,
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with young girls and eating disorders, that they're being fed that
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in an addictive way and the algorithm saying, 'Oh, they like that content.
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We want to keep giving it to them because it keeps them on their phones
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and I think that's the really vital message here, of any of these apps,
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is that their revenue comes
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from advertising. Teenagers are being fed content
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in a way that is addictive.
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If you are fed something,
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it means you're given something. In this case,
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it refers to content, not food.
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The content is addictive
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because social media users algorithms. Algorithms are a complex set of rules
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and calculations that prioritise and personalise the content a user sees.
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But we need to remember that social media platforms use algorithms
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to keep users on the platforms for as long as possible
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because their revenue comes from advertising. Revenue is the money
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a company earns. They're paid by other companies
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to use the social media space to promote their products.
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This could be seen as social media platforms prioritising making money
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over the mental health of users – a worry for parents.
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Professor Debbie Sridhar talked about the challenges
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of having a teenager addicted to social media on BBC
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World Service Programme, Inside Science.
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And so I think
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the challenge here, as a parent, listening to this is what you do about it.
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And I think the onus has been put on parents and concerned adults
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to find solutions on their own.
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And that means debates with your child over
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what are you are on, are you using this, but it's a losing battle
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because it's their entire social network.
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Professor Sridhar says
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that, when it comes to helping teenagers navigate social media,
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the onus has been put on parents to find solutions.
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The onus means the responsibility or duty.
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Parents need to be able to challenge their children when they need
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to, even if this is a losing battle, a fight
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they cannot win as teenagers have their entire life on social networks.
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OK Beth. I think it's time I reveal the answer to my question.
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I asked you
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what percentage of thirteen to twenty-four year olds use Snapchat.
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And I said it was 80%. And that was,
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I'm sorry to say, the wrong answer. Actually 90%
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of people aged between thirteen and twenty four
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use Snapchat – quite a lot.
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OK, let's recap the vocabulary
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we have learned from this programme, starting with adolescent –
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a person aged ten to nineteen, between childhood and adulthood.
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If you are fed content,
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you are given content.
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This is what the social media platform offers you automatically rather than
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what you search for yourself. Algorithms are a complex set of rules
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and calculations that prioritise and personalise the content a user
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sees. Revenue is the money
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a company earns which could come from sales or advertising. If the
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onus is on someone,
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it's their responsibility or duty.
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And finally, a losing battle is a fight
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you cannot win. Once again
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our six minutes are up.
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Join us again soon for more useful vocabulary here at Six Minute
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English. Goodbye for now. Bye.