<p>If you think excessive Facebook use by your spouse is behind your divorce, then you may be right, says a study.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Researchers, however, said that their findings do not establish a "cause-and-effect relationship" and need further individual data.<br /><br />For the study, they looked at the rise of Facebook use and the rate of divorce cases in each state in the US.<br /><br />They found that a 20 percent increase in the number of Facebook usage in a given state is associated with a four percent increase in the divorce rate the following year.<br /><br />"People who spent more time on Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites were more likely to have an unhappy marriage and were thinking about divorce," researchers added.<br /><br />However, researchers could not identify who exactly was creating new Facebook accounts.<br />The people increasing their Facebook usage were not necessarily the same people who were getting divorced, the study noted.<br /><br />The study, reported by Time magazine, was published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.<br /></p>
<p>If you think excessive Facebook use by your spouse is behind your divorce, then you may be right, says a study.<br /><br /></p>.<p>Researchers, however, said that their findings do not establish a "cause-and-effect relationship" and need further individual data.<br /><br />For the study, they looked at the rise of Facebook use and the rate of divorce cases in each state in the US.<br /><br />They found that a 20 percent increase in the number of Facebook usage in a given state is associated with a four percent increase in the divorce rate the following year.<br /><br />"People who spent more time on Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites were more likely to have an unhappy marriage and were thinking about divorce," researchers added.<br /><br />However, researchers could not identify who exactly was creating new Facebook accounts.<br />The people increasing their Facebook usage were not necessarily the same people who were getting divorced, the study noted.<br /><br />The study, reported by Time magazine, was published in the journal Computers in Human Behavior.<br /></p>