Social Media Addiction test: what it measures and how to interpret your score
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In brief : Social media platforms are designed to capture and retain your attention.
Social media platforms are designed to capture and retain your attention. This test evaluates four dimensions of your relationship with these platforms: compulsive checking, social comparison, fear of missing out (FOMO), and impact on your self-esteem. It will help you determine whether your use is recreational or if it constitutes a problematic dependency.
What the test measures
- Frequency and automatic nature of social media checking
- Tendency to compare yourself to others through content posted on social media
- Fear of missing information, events, or trends
- Consequences of social media on confidence and self-image
How to interpret your score
Your result reads as an intensity, not a diagnosis:
- Low : Your relationship with social media is healthy and balanced. You use them as a tool without being dependent.
- Moderate : You show moderate signs of social media dependency. A few adjustments could improve your well-being.
- High : Your social media dependency is significant and impacts your emotional and social well-being.
- Very High : Your social media addiction is severe and seriously affects your mental health and relationships. Professional help is necessary.
What your full report includes
Beyond the 5 free questions, the detailed PDF report (from EUR 1.99) includes:
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Prendre RDV en visioséance- Introduction : This report presents the results of your social media dependency assessment. It analyzes four dimensions: compulsive checking, social comparison, FOMO, and impact on your self-esteem.
- Global Score : Your overall social media addiction score is {globalScore}%, which corresponds to a {globalLevel} level.
- Dimension Analysis : Here is the breakdown of your scores for each dimension assessed. This analysis highlights the specific mechanisms that fuel your social media dependency.
- Recommendations : Four strategies to regain control: (1) Awareness and measurement — install Screen Time (iOS) or Digital Wellbeing (Android) to measure your actual usage (often 3-4× more than perceived). Identify triggers (boredom, anxiety, transition, waiting). 7-day usage journal. (2) Deliberate friction — delete social media apps from smartphone (use only on computer or mobile browser), disable all notifications, grayscale mode to make screen less attractive, charge phone outside bedroom. (3) Intentional substitutions — replace scroll moments with high-return activities (reading, sport, meditation, real contact). « Deactivation » rather than « deprivation » (Anders Hansen « The Attention Fix »). (4) Graded detox period — 24h, 7 days, 30 days (Cal Newport « Digital Minimalism »). Difficult unregulated emotions often emerge (anxiety, boredom, existential emptiness) that must be welcomed. If usage becomes compulsive and impacts work/relationships: CBT adapted for behavioral addictions, possible support by addiction-specialized psychologist. find a helpline in your country at findahelpline.com if dark thoughts.
- Resources : Social media addiction is documented as an emerging behavioral addiction (not yet formally listed in DSM-5 but widely studied). Frameworks: Mark Griffiths (component model of addictions: salience, mood modification, tolerance, withdrawal, conflict, relapse), Jean Twenge (« iGen » — impact on adolescent mental health), Tristan Harris (Center for Humane Technology, persuasive design), Adam Alter (« Irresistible »). Mechanisms: mesolimbic dopaminergic circuit, variable reinforcement (Skinner — like slot machines), Fear Of Missing Out (FOMO). Scales: Bergen Social Media Addiction Scale (BSMAS by Andreassen et al.), Smartphone Addiction Scale (Kwon). Studies: Twenge & Campbell on smartphones and teen mental health (alarming correlations), Hunt et al. 2018 (reducing social media = decrease in anxiety and depression).
When to take this test
- You recognise yourself in addiction, social media, FOMO and want to see more clearly.
- You want a structured reading rather than a vague impression.
- You are looking for an objective starting point before talking to a professional if needed.
FAQ
How long does the test take? 30 questions, about 15 min. The first 5 are free. Does the test provide a diagnosis? No. It measures an intensity and gives you reference points; only a professional can make a diagnosis. Are my answers confidential? Yes: the test is 100% anonymous and the report is delivered directly to you.👉 Start the Social Media Addiction test → — first 5 questions free, instant result, PDF report, 100% anonymous.
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