“…Although daily time spent on social media (e.g., Song et al, 2014;Wright et al, 2017) has been identified as a central factor, little is known about the relationships between specific SNS use (e.g., Facebook, Instagram) and healthrelated outcomes (e.g., physical, mental, social). Whereas some stud ies have suggested that SNS use is associated with health outcomes like subjective wellbeing (e.g., Stead & Bibby, 2017;Tromholt, 2016) or loneliness (e.g., Pittman & Reich, 2016), research has yet to shed light on unique wellbeing outcomes associ ated with specific SNS platform use, particularly among college students. As such, the purpose of the current study was to address this research gap by examining a range of healthrelated and wellbeing outcomes (e.g., depressive symptoms, loneliness, anxiety) among specific SNS platform (i.e., Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat, Marco Polo, LinkedIn) users in a college student sample.…”