妻友社区

Linda Charmaraman News


  • Learn more about where our research initiatives started, and where they are today

     Learn more about where our research initiatives started, and where they are today


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her expertise on how social media use differs by race.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the need for research-based decisions.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., is featured in the Social Media Overview, Social Media Benefits and Risks, and Social Media Classroom Strategies segments.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., writes about looking to youth as architects of a safer digital world.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares practical advice for parents.
  • Transforming Research into Action to Protect Teens on Social Media

    Linda at CongressLinda Charmaraman, Ph.D., contributed to an American Psychological Association advisory on social media use in adolescence and met with members of Congress.


  • Dr. Charmaraman provides insight into the dynamics of online discourse and what drives people to share opinions in the evolving landscape of social media.

  • Dr. Charmaraman's study explores the role of pets in middle schoolers' lives during the pandemic, uncovering insights about screen time, emotional support, and social interactions.

  • This Spotlight on 妻友社区 highlights Dr. Charmaraman's story and work on how social media affects its youngest and most marginalized users.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shared her expertise with Salon on why there is no "right age" to give kids smartphones.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., project director of the League of Resident Theatres' ongoing study on race and gender representation, comments on the rise of women leaders in Boston-area theaters.
  • Health advisory on social media use in adolescence

    two people sharing tabletSenior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., co-authored this "Health advisory on social media use in adolescence", released by the American Psychological Association. The advisory examines potential beneficial and harmful effects of social media use on adolescents鈥 social, educational, psychological, and neurological development, and provides recommendations based on the scientific evidence to date.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses how beauty filters can be detrimental to teens and young people.
  • Research Scientist Submits Testimony to Congress on Youth, Social Media, and Mental Health

    Justice Scales

    March 2, 2023

    Senior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., submitted this statement for the record in connection with the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee's February 14, 2023 hearing, "Protecting Our Children Online." In the statement, she notes some important policy directions and research findings that apply to youth, social media, and mental health, and urges the Committee to recognize that social media can have positive as well as negative effects on youth mental health.


  • White teens and teens of color do not have identical online experiences, explains Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D.
  • Research Scientist Teaches 妻友社区 Students How to Write for the Real World

    妻友社区 College students in Calderwood Seminar January 19, 2023

    The interdisciplinary course is focused on social technologies and adolescent development.


  • During a summit hosted by Meta, Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., give a deep dive into the latest research on social media and teen wellbeing.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., comments on a TikTok trend and Gen Z's ideas around aging and beauty.
  • Research Scientist Collaborates with Instagram to Promote Supportive Spaces Online

    charmaraman ig event expertsRobin Stevens, Associate Professor at USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism, Linda Charmaraman, and Earl Turner, Associate Professor of Psychology at Pepperdine University, served as experts on the Well-being Creator Collective pilot program.Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., was invited to join an expert steering committee to advise Instagram content creators on creating supportive online content.

  • New Field Study Will Examine Racial and Gender Representation in Resident Theater Leadership

    theater audience November 9, 2022

    WCW and the League of Resident Theatres will investigate systemic barriers to leadership positions and influence in the American theater.


  • WCW has partnered with the League of Resident Theatres to analyze the racial and gender representation of theater leadership and examine barriers to entry.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the positive and negative impacts of teen social media use. 

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses her research on the positive impacts of social media use for sexual minority teens.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., spoke on a panel hosted by the Morgan Stanley Alliance for Children's Mental Health. 
  • Annual Summer Workshop Teaches Middle School Girls About Digital Wellbeing

    2022 summer digital wellbeing workshop presenters August 28, 2022

    The five-day program allowed students to co-design an app to promote positive social media use and featured 妻友社区 College students and expert speakers on STEM.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses a collaboration to educate creators to help them produce responsible content on social media.

  • On ADDitude's ADHD Experts podcast, Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the unique ways that social media use can offer positives and negatives for neurodivergent youth. 

  • In a podcast interview, Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses her research on social media use and youth development.

  • Dr. Linda Charmaraman shares insights from her research on youth social media use and wellbeing.

  • In a podcast interview, Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the resilience of teens and tweens in a digital world.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares research findings on LGBTQ teens' social media use.
  • New Study Will Investigate How Discrimination Affects the Mental Health of Asian American Adolescents

    Sad Asian teen girl.

    The long-term aim of the study is to develop evidence on how parents, peers, and social media can mitigate the negative health consequences of discrimination. 


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses her research on youth wellbeing and social media use. (Article in Portuguese.)
  • Study Examines Parents' Perspectives on the Benefits and Challenges of Adolescent Pet Companionship

    middle school age girl uses laptop while holding pet dog May 23, 2022

    Adolescents鈥 relationships with their pets can be very important, since adolescents are at a developmental stage when they鈥檙e relying less on their families and more on other relationships in their lives鈥攂oth human and animal.


  • Research on body image from Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., is cited in an article on teen wellbeing.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses her research on teens' social media use during the pandemic.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her expertise on the minimum age for joining social media.

  • Linda Charmaraman, PhD., contributes an expert opinion on Instagram's impact on teens.

  • Research from our Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab explores the impacts of using social media at a young age. 
  • Diverse Data Samples Drive Social Change

    Huiying, Linda, and BudnampetCharmaraman (center) and her former 妻友社区 College student interns Huiying B. Chan 鈥16 (left) and Budnampet Ramanudom 鈥18 (right) co-authored a book chapter on how and why women of color use social media to create virtual communities.Through the lens of her work on youth, media, and wellbeing, Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., explains how diverse data samples can help to better support underserved populations.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her expertise on the mental health benefits and drawbacks of social media.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses a new social media trend. 


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares findings from her research on social media use in younger children.
  • Joining Social Media Before Age 11 Is Associated With Problematic Digital Behaviors

    tween girl of asian descent uses a tablet October 27, 2021

    A new study finds that limiting access lessens some negative effects of social media use among younger users.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her expertise on leaked research studies about Instagram鈥檚 impact on teens.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her findings on the link between youth screen time and their social development.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses social media use among LGBTQ youth on the Channel Q radio show, Let's Go There.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares findings from a new journal article on LGBTQ youth social media use.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares findings on middle school students' social media use.
  • Middle Schoolers Learn About STEM and Digital Wellbeing During Annual Summer Workshop

    妻友社区 student Connie Gu shares photos from her STEM journey September 1, 2021

    Middle school students learned about STEM concepts and healthy social media use during a workshop hosted by the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares findings from her research on middle schoolers' social media use.
  • New Research on the Health and Wellbeing of LGBTQ+ Teens

    A biracial couple of teen girls smile while hugging outside.Several new studies from Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., and Jennifer M. Grossman, Ph.D., help us understand more about the experiences of LGBTQ+ teens.


  • Senior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the rise of private audio chats and interactive social media.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the meaning of healthy social media usage in this feature in 妻友社区 Weston Magazine.
  • New Research Looks at How Social Media Affects Adolescents' Body Image

    Teen girl uses phone while putting on makeup February 24, 2021

    A recently published journal article explores social media鈥檚 role in influencing adolescents' attitudes toward body image.


  • WCW Senior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., is featured in Accents discussing teens and technology during COVID-19.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., has been appointed as Forbes Ignite's new Scientific Advisor. 

  • Linda Charmaraman Appointed Forbes Ignite Scientific Advisor

    Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D. December 15, 2020

    Senior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., has been appointed as Forbes Ignite鈥檚 new Scientific Advisor.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses her research on the Forbes Ignite podcast, Inner Wealth.

  • Study Examines the Role of Pets in Adolescents鈥 Online Social Interactions

    03 teen girl phone dog webA journal article co-authored by Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., explores how pets can act as either a substitute or a complement to social interactions online.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., of WCW and the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab is quoted in this article describing her new study on adolescent sleep and bedtime technology habits.
  • Quantity, content, and context of social media use may affect adolescents鈥 sleep

    Teen lays in bed and looks at phone November 2, 2020

    A new study finds that the quantity of social technology use, type of content viewed, and social context is significantly related to later bedtimes and less sleep for early adolescents.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., of WCW and the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab was mentioned in this article that describes the links between pet ownership and teen social development.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., of WCW is quoted in this article discussing Facebook in the time of COVID-19 as it relates to incoming college students.
  • WCW Hosts Workshop for Middle Schoolers on STEM, Digital Wellbeing, and Identity

    Gitanjali Rao speaks to students during the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab virtual summer workshop August 20, 2020

    The 妻友社区 teamed up with the 妻友社区 College Computer Science Department to host a virtual workshop that helped adolescents explore their identities, introduced them to STEM concepts, and taught them about healthy social media use.


  • Senior Research Scientst Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., spoke with Education Dive about the positive ways middle schoolers have been using social media during COVID-19.
  • Webinar Links Remote Learning, Social Technology, and Social and Emotional Learning

    Kamilah Drummond-Forrester, Linda Charmaraman, and Sarah Wong July 31, 2020

    Two programs of the 妻友社区 collaborated to host a webinar that explored the roles of social technology and SEL in remote learning.

  • When Social Distancing Collides with Social Media

    Teenage girl sits on couch and stares at smartphone screenLinda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares tips for parents wondering how to help their children maintain a healthy relationship with social media during isolation.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., comments on the positive and negative impacts social media use can have during COVID-19.

  • Dr. Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., discusses the positive and negative impact of teen and tween social media use during COVID-19 in a video interview with Your Teen Magazine.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., and her research is quoted in this article on the impact of social media on the health of teens.

  • Senior research scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., shares her insight on the different ways kids engage with and feel the effects of social media.

  • Adolescent Development in an Age of Social Media

    Special issue of Journal of Adolescent Research January 29, 2020

    Senior Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., served as a guest editor for a special issue of the Journal of Adolescent Research focused on adolescent and emerging adult development in an age of social media.


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., director of the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab discusses the evidence for parental monitoring of online and mobile content and associated positive outcomes.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., senior research scientist, discusses some of the important factors parents should consider when thinking about purchasing a cell phone for their tweens.

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., director of the Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab, discusses the causes of a growing phenomenon: teens鈥 failure to act in situations of violence.

  • Senior research scientist Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., helps teach middle schoolers about social media鈥檚 impact on their lives and healthy ways to use it.

  • WCW Partners with Local Middle School to Promote Healthy Social Media Use

    middle school age kids work on laptopJuly 29, 2019

    Dr. Linda Charmaraman turned her research into action when she co-led a workshop teaching middle schoolers to use social media in healthy ways.

  • Gaming Affects Youth Development

    Two middle-school-age boys play a computer game.Online games like Fortnite influence youth development, according to findings from Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D.

  • Presentations & Convenings: Inaugural Women of Color Conference

    The 妻友社区 (WCW) partnered with The Home for Little Wanderers for the inaugural Women of Color Conference held at 妻友社区 College in June 2018. This program鈥攇eared toward providers who work with at-risk youth and families across the Commonwealth of Massachusetts鈥 highlighted the importance of self-care; offered opportunities for relaxation, renewal, and inspiration; and provided a context in which to view the critical work done on behalf of young women and girls of color. The conference was spearheaded by Joan Wallace- Benjamin, Ph.D., the recently retired president and CEO of The Home, one of the largest service providers in New England dedicated to ensuring the healthy behavioral, emotional, social, and educational development, and physical wellbeing of children and families living in at-risk circumstances.

  • Presentations & Convenings: Adolescents, Identity, and Social Media

    Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., WCW senior research scientist and director of the Youth, Media, & Wellbeing Research Lab, co-presented a poster with her WCW Class of 鈥67 Intern Rebecca Leu (Class of 2019) entitled, 鈥淎dolescent Social Media Use and Body Image: Associations with depression, social anxiety, and peers,鈥 at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association (APA) in San Francisco, CA, in August.

  • Global Connections 2018

    Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., senior research scientist and director of the Youth, Media, & Wellbeing Research Lab at the 妻友社区 (WCW), presented with a panel of experts on social media and technology from infancy to young adulthood at the Pediatric Academic Societies meeting in Toronto, Canada. Based on her work with Megan Moreno, M.D., M.P.H., M.S.Ed., at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, and funded through Children and Screens: Institute of Digital Media and Child Development, the May talk focused on the psychosocial and physical health associations of early social media use before age 12.

  • Short Takes, NIH Funding for Social Media Research and to Promote Undergraduate Research

    The Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded the 妻友社区 (WCW) $450,000 over three years to study social media use of early adolescents while providing 妻友社区 College students with hands-on research opportunities. The longitudinal, multi-method study will investigate associations between middle school students鈥 social media use and health implications, as well as the roles of peer influence and parental monitoring.

  • NIH Awards 妻友社区 Funding to Promote Undergraduate Research

    Sabina Unni, Stephanie Cobas, Linda Charmaraman, Cynthia Serrano NajeraOctober 17, 2018

    NIH awarded WCW $450,000 over three years to study social media use of early adolescents while providing 妻友社区 College students with hands-on research opportunities.

  • Eliminating Cultural Biases in Pursuit of High-Quality Education

    child drawing with colored pencilsAugust 22, 2018

    Researchers at WCW investigate and eliminate cultural biases in assessment tool to ensure that results accurately indicate the quality level of youth afterschool educational programs.


  • Dr. Linda Charmaraman discusses her research on what people said #MAGA meant to them at the American Psychological Association conference.

  • 妻友社区 Partners with The Home for Little Wanderers to Host Inaugural Women of Color Conference

    Kamilah Drummond-Forrester, Linda Charmaraman, Layli Maparyan, and LaShawnda Lindsay-Dennis at the Women of Color Conference August 6, 2018

    Self care, rejuvenation, creativity, and empowerment were promoted throughout the Women of Color Conference held in partnership by WCW and The Home for Little Wanderers in June 2018 at 妻友社区 College.

  • New Findings, Publications, Presentations: Youth and Adolescent Development

    A diverse, happy group of kids stand around a piano singing


    From afterschool programs to conversations about sex, research from WCW recognizes the profound ways adults can ensure healthy adolescent development.

  • Can Extended Family Keep Teens from Making Risky Sexual Decisions?

    Latina woman and teenager talkApril 23, 2018

    Most research about family sexuality communication has focused on teens and their parents, but Dr. Jennifer Grossman is including conversations with extended family members to understand how they can help teens make smarter decisions about dating, sex, and relationships.

  • Short Takes, Pilot Grant Awarded to Study Adolescents鈥 Media Use

    Children and Screens: Institute of Digital Media and Child Development awarded Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D, research associate at the 妻友社区 (WCW), a $100,000 pilot grant to study parent and peer influences on social media use in early adolescence as well as the implications for psychosocial and behavioral health. Working with co-principal investigator Megan Moreno, M.D., M.P.H., academic division chief in General Pediatrics/Adolescent Medicine, and vice chair of Digital Health at the Children鈥檚 Hospital at University of Wisconsin, Madison, Charmaraman will collect data from middle school youth and their parents in the Greater Boston area. The primary objectives of this one-year study are to: (1) investigate the developmental processes of social media use during the pubertal transition to adolescence, highlighting factors that are likely to have explanatory power in understanding the relationships between social media use, social context, and psychosocial and behavioral health; (2) use multiple reporters on adolescent social media use in a mixed-method design utilizing matched parent-to-student survey and student social media site data; and (3) build theory on mechanisms for how, when, and why early initiation into social technologies co-occurs with behavioral health outcomes, moderated by peer and family influences.

  • A Call for Research on Growing Health Issue: Children and Screen Time

    For Immediate Release: November 1, 2017


  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D., studies the unique ways women of color use social media.
  • Commentary with Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D.

    Research & Action Report, Spring/Summer 2015

    By Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D.

    Virtual Harassment & Bullying in the College Years

    Given the immense public attention on cyber bullying amongst teens and that social media is intricately tied to adolescent daily behavior, it鈥檚 not surprising that the vast majority of studies on cyber bullying are conducted on youth under 18. A recent review1 found that the highest incidence of cyber bullying in youth occurs during seventh and eighth grades鈥攊ncidence that increases from elementary school, but decreases into the high school years. One might predict that since cyber bullying wanes in high school, that in college it would continue to wane. It was only until Pew鈥檚 recent study on online harassment in 2014鈥攚hich demonstrated that the cyber harassment rate in young adults aged 18-24 can reach rates as high as 70 percent鈥攖hat we can now see that young adulthood deserves more attention, academic inquiry, and public scrutiny.

  • Commentary: Virtual Harassment & Bullying in the College Years

    Research & Action Report, Spring/Summer 2015

    By Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D.

    Given the immense public attention on cyber bullying amongst teens and that social media is intricately tied to adolescent daily behavior, it鈥檚 not surprising that the vast majority of studies on cyber bullying are conducted on youth under 18. A recent review1 found that the highest incidence of cyber bullying in youth occurs during seventh and eighth grades鈥攊ncidence that increases from elementary school, but decreases into the high school years. One might predict that since cyber bullying wanes in high school, that in college it would continue to wane. It was only until Pew鈥檚 recent study on online harassment in 2014鈥攚hich demonstrated that the cyber harassment rate in young adults aged 18-24 can reach rates as high as 70 percent鈥攖hat we can now see that young adulthood deserves more attention, academic inquiry, and public scrutiny.


  • Wonkette, October 22, 2014
    by Kaili Joy Gray


  • Sumru Erkut, Ph.D., and Jennifer M. Grossman, Ph.D., are cited in this article on the impact of sex-ed in health classes on middle school sexual behavior. 


  • Boston.com, October 20, 2014
    by Shannon McMahon

  • Research Scientist Linda Charmaraman, PhD, Receives $100,000 Grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

    For Immediate Release: April 5, 2013

  • Linda Charmaraman, Ph.D. named the Susan McGee Bailey Research Scholar, effective July 1, 2012

    For immediate release: February 20, 2012


  • Beyond School (blog for Education Week) June 10, 2011
    Nora Fleming
  • Examining Mixed-Ancestry Identity in Adolescents

    Two years ago, scholars at the 妻友社区 (WCW) launched a study of racial and ethnic identification among adolescents of mixed ancestry. The reasons for pursuing the research were several. Most literature about ethnic/racial self-identification patterns derived from adult respondents. For example, the series of studies that led to the change in wording of racial self-identification in the 2000 Census was carried out with adults.

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