Annotated Bibliography James, Carrie, Katie Davis, Linda Charmaraman, Sara Konrath, Peter Slovak, Emily Weinstein, and Lana Yarosh.“Digital Life and Youth Well-being, Social Connectedness, Empathy, and Narcissism.” Pediatrics, vol. 140, no.S2, November 2017, pp. 71-75. Academic Search Premier,doi: 10.1542/peds.2016-1758F. Accessed 21 January 2020. This article explores the positive and negative effects of social media on well-being, social connectedness, and the ability to empathize with others. The author provided recommendations for caretakers, educators, and policy makeup that will help improve teens relationship to social media. This article could be used to show the complex impacts of social media on well-being and connections. This article authors are qualified, the bibliography is extensive, and the article has been peer reviewed. K.Y. “Social Media and Teens.” School Library Journal,Vol.64 no.10, October 2018, pp.18-18, 2/3p. 1 Graph. Accessed 21 January 2020. The article includes a survey from “Social Media”, Social Life,” released in the U.S in 2018 by Common Sense Media. The survey included social media usage by young teenagers.How face-to-face communication has decreased due to the use of social media.In this article focuses on the teenager'spersonality which depends on the effects of social media usage.This article is qualified because it has relevant citations and resources. Peiró-Velert, Carmen, Alexandra Valencia-peris, Luis M. González, Xavier Garcia-Massó, Pilar Serra Añó, and José Devís-Devís. "Screen Media Usage, Sleep Time and Academic Performance in Adolescents: Clustering a Self-Organizing Maps Analysis.” Plos One, vol. 9,no. 6, June 2014, pp. 1-9. Academic Search Premier, doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0099478. Accessed 10 February 2022. This article explains the connection between sleep and screen media usage. Researchers found that teens who spend more time on screen media spend less time sleeping and lower academic performance than those who spend less time on screen media. This information could be useful in a rebuttal because it shows that people who use social media can determine its impact on sleep and school performance. This article has an extensive bibliography and its published in a peer-reviewed research journal.