Subscribe
The latest psychology and neuroscience discoveries.
My Account
  • Mental Health
  • Social Psychology
  • Cognitive Science
  • Psychopharmacology
  • Neuroscience
  • About
No Result
View All Result
PsyPost
PsyPost
No Result
View All Result
Home Exclusive Mental Health Anxiety

Eye-tracking study suggests that people with social anxiety not only avoid looking at strangers but also their surroundings

by Beth Ellwood
December 26, 2021
in Anxiety
Share on TwitterShare on Facebook
Stay on top of the latest psychology findings: Subscribe now!

A new study published in the journal PLOS One suggests that social anxiety is characterized by increased avoidance, rather than hypervigilance, during social situations. The naturalistic study tracked participants’ eye gazes as a stranger entered the room and found that participants with higher social anxiety showed a shorter initial fixation to the stranger and lower visual exploration of the environment.

People with social anxiety disorder (SAD) experience a persistent fear of social judgment, leading them to avoid social scenarios. While the cognitive processes underlying SAD are complex, researchers tend to agree that attentional biases play a central role in the disorder. Interestingly, studies have presented mixed findings related to the nature of these biases.

Some eye-tracking studies suggest that people with social anxiety tend to look less at others (avoidance), and other studies suggest they pay more attention to others (hypervigilance). Moreover, some researchers have proposed that both biases are at work — with people with social anxiety displaying initial, reflexive hypervigilance but then switching to avoidance as a cognitively-driven response.

Study authors Irma Konovalova and her team conducted an eye-tracking study to assess for avoidance, hypervigilance, and hyperscanning of the environment. Notably, they designed a naturalistic social task to measure participants’ eye gaze responses in an authentic social scenario — the first study of its kind.

Thirty students from a university in the United Kingdom participated in the study. One at a time, participants sat in a seminar room, were fitted with eye-tracking glasses, and completed measures of state anxiety and trait social anxiety. The students had been told they were partaking in a visual-search study and that their eye movements would be tracked as they completed several visual search tasks.

In reality, the study authors were interested in monitoring participants’ eye movements during an upcoming social scenario involving a stranger. Following the first visual search task, the researcher pretended to forget something and stepped out of the room. Shortly after, a confederate entered the room. Playing the role of another participant, the confederate briefly acknowledged the participant and sat down to work on their own questionnaires.

The researchers analyzed the eye-tracking data to see whether participants with higher social anxiety showed distinct eye movement patterns.

No relationships were found between participants’ social anxiety scores and the overall amount of time they spent looking at the confederate nor the number of fixations to the confederate — in general, both participants with high social anxiety and low social anxiety avoided looking at the confederate.

The authors say this avoidance may be a reflection of a phenomenon called “civil inattention”, where strangers in close proximity avoid imposing on each other by acknowledging each other’s presence but otherwise disengaging. For example, strangers in a confined elevator might politely ignore each other.

Students with higher social anxiety showed shorter first fixation times to the confederate — they spent less time fixating at the confederate’s face when he first entered the room. “We suggest this equates to an additional level of avoidance in the more [socially anxious] participants over and above the more generic form of civil inattention found across the sample,” Konovalova and team say. The confederate entering the room was perhaps too salient for participants with social anxiety to ignore, but once they looked at him, they preferred not to maintain their gaze in his direction.

Finally, it was found that participants with social anxiety engaged in fewer fixations, fewer saccades, and had a shorter scan path length compared to those with lower social anxiety scores, suggesting “less visual exploration” of the overall environment. “One possible interpretation of this is that the higher [social anxiety] participants were especially intent on avoiding social interaction due to their anxiety,” the authors of the study say, “and the most effective way to achieve this is to avoid committing any behavior that might attract the confederate’s attention.”

Contrary to previous lab studies, the researchers found no evidence of hypervigilance related to social anxiety. The researchers say this may suggest that hypervigilance is an “artefact of experimental paradigms” that does not show up in real-world environments. Instead, people with social anxiety seem to employ a distinct gazing strategy defined by increased “inhibitory control over one’s gaze” in order to curb anxiety and potentially limit social interaction.

The study, “Adults with higher social anxiety show avoidant gaze behaviour in a real-world social setting: A mobile eye tracking study”, was authored by Irma Konovalova, Jastine V. Antolin, Helen Bolderston, and Nicola J. Gregory.

RELATED

Scientists uncover previously unknown target of alcohol in the brain: the TMEM132B-GABAA receptor complex
Anxiety

New study reveals how the brain learns to adapt to harmless threats

October 17, 2025
Exposure to smartphone light suppresses melatonin levels at night
Anxiety

Night owls more prone to problematic smartphone use, with loneliness and anxiety as key factors

September 22, 2025
Autistic individuals and those with social anxiety differ in how they experience empathy, new study suggests
Anxiety

Autistic individuals and those with social anxiety differ in how they experience empathy, new study suggests

September 17, 2025
Sleep problems surprisingly common in adults with ADHD, study finds
Anxiety

Researchers shed light on how personality and anxiety relate to insomnia

September 14, 2025
Progestin-only birth control during adolescence linked to impaired fear regulation in adulthood
Anxiety

Progestin-only birth control during adolescence linked to impaired fear regulation in adulthood

September 9, 2025
Extraverts show faster, stronger, and more patterned emotional reactions
Anxiety

Choral singing decreases the risk of developing depression and anxiety in older adults

September 5, 2025
Neuroscientists just rewrote our understanding of psychedelics with a groundbreaking receptor-mapping study
Anxiety

Cannabis use linked to stronger emotional responses but also better recovery in people with anxiety

September 4, 2025
Mothers who feel unworthy of being loved have less supportive responses to child distress
Anxiety

People with insecure affective attachment are more likely to be socially anxious

August 31, 2025

STAY CONNECTED

LATEST

Feeling moved by a film may prompt people to reflect and engage politically

New study challenges a leading theory on how noise affects ADHD traits

Heatwaves and air pollution linked to heightened depression risks

A 35-day study of couples reveals the daily interpersonal benefits of sexual mindfulness

Spouses from less privileged backgrounds tend to share more synchronized heartbeats

Trigger warnings spark curiosity more than caution, new research indicates

Study finds stronger fitness in countries with greater gender equality

Experts warn of an ‘intimate authenticity crisis’ as AI enters the dating scene

         
       
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms and Conditions
[Do not sell my information]

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Subscribe
  • My Account
  • Cognitive Science Research
  • Mental Health Research
  • Social Psychology Research
  • Drug Research
  • Relationship Research
  • About PsyPost
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy