Researchers will study the effects of the policy on young people’s mental health, social interactions and political ...
Social media platforms are everywhere, and most children and teens have access. Many indicators suggest social media use can ...
Roughly one-in-five U.S. teens say they are on TikTok and YouTube almost constantly. At the same time, 64% of teens say they use chatbots, including about three-in-ten who do so daily.
Young women leaders, social media Influencers and Women Commissioners from tertiary institutions have received training on ...
Disappointment has been expressed after a suspected case of bluetongue was flagged in a second herd in Co Down.
A.I. search tools, chatbots and social media are associated with lower cognitive performance, studies say. What to do? Credit...Derek Abella Supported by By Brian X. Chen Brian X. Chen is The Times’s ...
Variety’s Faith & Media Impact Report returns Dec. 3. The list recognizes a thriving segment of the entertainment industry that includes storytellers across the religious spectrum who are offering up ...
Preteens using increasing amounts of social media perform poorer in reading, vocabulary and memory tests in early adolescence compared with those who use no or little social media. That's according to ...
Big Tobacco once looked unstoppable. It made billions by exploiting a quirk of human biology: our brains’ craving for nicotine. With the help of advertising that cast cigarettes as glamorous, the ...
In the wake of the assassination of right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, one thing many in Colorado’s congressional delegation agree on is that social media isn’t helping the current political discourse.
WITH PRESIDENT AND GENERAL MANAGER DAN GEROUS. SOCIAL MEDIA HAS INVADED ALMOST EVERY ASPECT OF OUR LIVES. AND I’LL SAY IT RIGHT HERE AT THE TOP, IT’S NOT ALL BAD. THINK OF THE NEW RECIPES YOU’VE TRIED ...
It's become part of our culture: liking, commenting, and sharing on social media, but with increasing regularity, those commonplace actions are costing people their jobs. The message here isn't that ...