A new study offers insight into how social media became a lifeline for mental health-related conversations during the pandemic. University of Auckland researchers Shohil Kishore, Professor David Sundaram and Professor Michael Myers explored the evolving role of Twitter in facilitating mental-health related discourse to show how users' psychological needs shifted across different phases of the crisis. The study is published in the Journal of Information Technology .

Despite its often negative reputation , social media provided support and connection during the early stages of the pandemic , says Kishore. His analysis of mental health-related retweets shows a sharp spike in activity in 2020, as people turned to Twitter to fulfill needs that had become hard to meet in real life. "As lockdowns restricted personal autonomy, people turned online to meet three particular needs related to competence , self-reflection and finding a sense of place.

" Changes in retweeting between 2019 and 2020 reflected users' efforts to regain control, reflect on their changing identities, and find an online "home" where they could express themselves and regain some control over their lives. "Before the pandemic, people might have gone to the gym, a pub quiz, or to a friend's place for coffee to maintain their mental well-being. When those options disappeared, more individuals shifted to Twitter to connect and discuss mental health," he says.

Competence—the desire to control one's environment and ach.