This paper introduces the construct of “Self-View Fixation” (SVF), defined as the chronic, involuntary allocation of attention toward one’s own digital reflection during video-mediated communication. Historically, human social cognition evolved to process two primary communicative channels: semantic content and interlocutor non-verbal behavior. Video conferencing introduces a continuous “third channel”—the self-face—which acts as a high-priority, self-relevant stimulus that the human brain lacks the evolutionary mechanisms to suppress. Consequently, continuous exposure to the self-view depletes finite cognitive resources and induces a fundamental shift in self-awareness, transforming the individual from an active subject of communication into a passive object of self-observation. To systematically categorize this phenomenon, this paper delineates a clinical typology comprising seven distinct archetypes of SVF (The Controller, The Hider, The Objectified, The Performer, The Face-Saver, The Captivated, and The Overloaded), each driven by specific psychological or neurocognitive mechanisms. Targeted, archetype-specific clinical interventions grounded in cognitive-behavioral principles are outlined, aimed at dismantling the digital safety behaviors that maintain SVF, restoring functional communicative capacity, and mitigating risks of depersonalization.
Alexei Sapkin (Sat,) studied this question.