Protecting Youth Well-Being on Social Media Platforms
The Big Problem
Many adults remember staying connected through proximity. Friendships depended on who lived nearby, who shared a classroom, or who could meet after school. If someone didn’t call back, the silence could last for days. Today’s youth grow up inside social media systems where connection rarely pauses. Messages ping instantly, reactions appear in real time, and visibility is tracked through views, likes, and follows.
Social media doesn’t simply host interaction. It shapes how attention and emotion develop. Platforms watch what users replay, where they slow their scroll, and what draws them back after logging off, then revise what appears next. Personalization learns fast, and it may increasingly reward content that captures repeat attention, as measured through pauses, replays, and return visits.
Adolescents encounter these systems while emotional regulation, judgment, and self-control are still developing. The skills required to manage algorithmic feeds—deciding when to disengage, interpreting social feedback, resisting repeated exposure to potentially harmful ideologies—aren’t yet stable. Young users may understand that algorithms respond to behavior, but they might not consistently adjust how they scroll or absorb messages that could be harmful to their well-being.
Decision science suggests that protecting vulnerable youth requires changing the conditions that shape engagement, including supportive defaults, incentives for platforms to promote safer control settings, and visible modeling of social media literacy by trusted figures.
About the Author
Maryam Sorkhou
Maryam holds an Honours BSc in Psychology from the University of Toronto and is currently completing her PhD in Medical Science at the same institution. She studies how sex and gender interact with mental health and substance use, using neurobiological and behavioural approaches. Passionate about blending neuroscience, psychology, and public health, she works toward solutions that center marginalized populations and elevate voices that are often left out of mainstream science.















