Social Media

Having Lots Of Facebook Friends Boosts More Than Your Ego

A new study found that Facebook users who receive and accept the most friend requests are 34 percent less likely to die within two years.

Having Lots Of Facebook Friends Boosts More Than Your Ego
Getty Images
SMS

Turns out, having lots of friend requests on Facebook is good for more than just your ego.

According to a new study, Facebook users who get a substantial amount of friend requests could live longer.

To come to this conclusion, researchers took about 12 million California Facebook profiles and matched them to public documents from the state, like birth and death certificates.

Those analyzed were born between 1945 and 1989. The study's authors made sure the users' information was kept private by aggregating the data before they analyzed it.

SEE MORE: Your Race Could Affect Which Facebook Ads You See

And they found the Facebook users who had received and accepted the most friend requests were 34 percent less likely to die within two years, compared to those who got the least amount of friend requests.

Which is pretty surprising, considering all of the warnings doctors typically give about spending too much time online.

But as a news release about the study put it, "The research confirms what scientists have known for a long time about the offline world: People who have stronger social networks live longer."

As The New York Times points out, two of the researchers who participated in the study had worked for Facebook. But they say the company didn't influence the results. 

"We had some things in writing that they couldn’t interfere with the publication of the research no matter what the result was," said William Hobbs, a postdoctoral fellow at Northeastern University.

To read more about the results of the study, head to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences' website.