Research on attention allocation to signs of social feedback in social anxiety has mainly shown attentional avoidance. Yet, our social world is vastly changing. Physical in-person encounters are no longer the sole medium for social interactions, as social media platforms (SMP's) fulfil a significant part of social life. Still, assessing attention allocation to indicators of social evaluation/feedback in social anxiety in this novel environment is still scarce. Socially anxious (n=30) and nonanxious participants (n=30) completed a reading comprehension task while an Instagram page (unrelated to the task) was concurrently visible on the computer screen. Critically, the Instagram page included an image reflecting participants’ personal features (a personalized portfolio), which received "ongoing" mock social evaluation (in the form of “Likes") while participants completed the reading comprehension task. Using eye-tracking methodology, we monitored participants’ attention allocation to the Instagram page, computing the total number of visits to, and the total time spent on, the Instagram page. We then divided the Instagram page to three complementing areas – the "Like" icon; the personalized portfolio image; and the rest of the page – and repeated the same analyses. Socially anxious participants exhibited greater attention allocation to the Instagram page, manifesting in both attentional indices (visits, dwell time), which was specifically driven by the Like icon. Results were not affected by participants’ daily Instagram usage time. Socially anxious individuals are biased toward signs of social evaluation/feedback when on SMPs, diverging from prior research on attention allocation during ‘concrete/real’ social evaluative contexts. • Socially anxious participants allocated more attention to the Instagram page • This increased attention allocation manifested in both saccade and fixation data • Attention allocation was driven by the “like” icon signaling social evaluation • Group differences in attention allocation emerged in the second time epoch • Results were not affected by participants’ daily Instagram usage time
Hallel et al. (Sun,) studied this question.