Social media has rapidly become a ubiquitous feature of daily life, yet research examining its psychological consequences has yielded conflicting findings. This paper argues that the active–passive dichotomy, contrasting interactive engagement with passive consumption, offers the most robust framework for understanding when and why social media use harms or benefits well-being. Drawing on Festinger’s (1954) social comparison theory as an explanatory mechanism, we synthesise meta-analytic, longit

Comparison by Default as the Unseen Cost of Passive Social Media
Ahmed Fahad Alanazi (ahmedaldhmashii@gmail.com)
