Figure 2: The more you use, the more you lose.
Maybe my title is a bit too brief - it is about whether someone is happy about the time spent on a particular app. I can think of two null hypotheses that the second graph alone seems to disprove: - the amount of time users spend on social media platforms is unrelated to their reported happiness about using said app - social media apps are not significantly different from phone calls / texts / emails Those don't need a control group, right?
Both of your hypotheses, even if rejected, only point to correlated data. Correlation studies, especially those that rely on self-reported surveys, are very, very close to worthless, scientifically. FWIW, I happen to detest almost all social media, even the ones I use, so I don't find the conclusions of the study unbelievable--but it's just that the data they're using aren't what's making me believe it; it's my own experience. You always need a control if you want to make a point that is believable. And not a historic control--a randomized, prospective control.