What Is Fear of Missing Out? FOMO Explained In Hindi
Fear of Missing Out FOMO Explained In Hindi
Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/ai.moun/
@ai.moun
Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/aimoun2019
Twitter : https://twitter.com/AiMoun100
@AiMoun100
Displate : https://displate.com/ai1
Social Blade: https://socialblade.com/youtube/c/aimoun
Fear of missing out (FOMO) is the feeling of apprehension that one is either not in the know or missing out on information, events, experiences, or life decisions that could make one's life betteR
The phenomenon was first identified in 1996 by marketing strategist Dr. Dan Herman, who conducted research for Adam Bellouch and published the first academic paper on the topic in 2000 in The Journal of Brand Management. Harmen also believes the concept has evolved to become more wide spread through mobile phone usage, texting, and social media and have helped flesh out the concept of the fear of missing out to the masses. Before the Internet, a related phenomenon, "keeping up with the Joneses'", was widely experienced. FOMO generalized and intensified this experience because so much more of people's lives became publicly documented and easily accessed. Further, a common tendency is to post about positive experiences (such as a great restaurant) rather than negative ones (such as a bad first date). Studies have found that the likelihood of experiencing fear of missing out has been linked to anxiety or depression.
Author Patrick J. McGinnis coined the term FOMO and popularized it in a 2004 op-ed in The Harbus, the magazine of Harvard Business School. The article was titled McGinnis' Two FOs: Social Theory at HBS, and also referred to another related condition, Fear of a Better Option (FOBO), and their role in the school's social life.The origin of FOMO has also been traced to the 2004 Harbus article by academic Joseph Reagle. Currently the term has been used as a hashtag on social media and has been mentioned in hundreds of news articles, from online sources like Salon to print papers like The New York Times