Abstract

We created a novel social feedback paradigm to study how motivation for potential social links is influenced in adolescents and adults. 88 participants (42F/46M) created online posts and then expended physical effort to show their posts to other users, who varied in number of followers and probability of positive feedback. We focused on two populations of particular interest from a social feedback perspective: adolescents relative to young adults (13-17 vs 18-24 years of age), and participants with social anxiety symptoms. Individuals with higher self-reported symptoms of social anxiety did not follow the typical pattern of increased effort to obtain social feedback from high status peers. Adolescents were more willing to exert physical effort on the task than young adults. Overall, participants were more likely to exert physical effort for high social status users and for users likely to yield positive feedback, and men were more likely to exert effort than women, findings that parallel prior results in effort-based tasks with financial rather than social rewards. Together the findings suggest social motivation is malleable, driven by factors of social status and the likelihood of a positive social outcome, and that age, sex, and social anxiety significantly impact patterns of socially motivated decision-making.

Highlights

  • Social feedback is fundamental to human interactions and decision-making, but modes and scales of social feedback are evolving rapidly with the proliferation of social media platforms

  • Participants chose the hard task more when there was a higher probability of receiving positive feedback (F (2, 688) = 20.9, p < .001) and when the M-Turk User had a higher social status (F (2, 688) =

  • There was an interaction between social status and probability (F (4, 688) = 2.7, p = 0.032) (Fig 2), as participants chose the hard task more often when it was highly likely that they would receive positive feedback from high social status peers

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Summary

Introduction

Social feedback is fundamental to human interactions and decision-making, but modes and scales of social feedback are evolving rapidly with the proliferation of social media platforms. Users of social media can find themselves rapidly exposed to large amounts of feedback by virtue of their links in social networks. A comment on a news item may be highlighted by an account with many followers, triggering a torrent of support or criticism. An aspiring artist may awake to find that an influential account highlighted their work, which was accessed or purchased by tens of thousands of people overnight.

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