Publication | Open Access
Adults with higher social anxiety show avoidant gaze behaviour in a real-world social setting: A mobile eye tracking study
24
Citations
40
References
2021
Year
Social PsychologyAffective NeuroscienceAttentionSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyAttentional BiasesFirst FixationMobile EyeBehavioral SciencesCognitive ScienceReal-world Social SettingEye GazeVision ResearchApplied Social PsychologyExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionVisual FunctionSocial BehaviorEye TrackingHuman InteractionAdaptive Emotion
Attentional biases are a core characteristic of social anxiety (SA). However, research has yielded conflicting findings and failed to investigate these biases in real, face-to-face social situations. Therefore, this study examined attentional biases in SA by measuring participants' eye gaze within a novel eye-tracking paradigm during a real-life social situation. Student participants (N = 30) took part in what they thought was a visual search study, when a confederate posing as another participant entered the room. Whilst all participants avoided looking at the confederate, those with higher SA fixated for a shorter duration during their first fixation on him, and executed fewer fixations and saccades overall as well as exhibiting a shorter scanpath. These findings are indicative of additional avoidance in the higher SA participants. In contrast to previous experimental work, we found no evidence of social hypervigilance or hyperscanning in high SA individuals. The results indicate that in unstructured social settings, avoidance rather than vigilance predominates, especially in those with higher SA.
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