# Visual Attention to Food Bank Posters: Insights from an Exploratory Eye-Tracking Study

**Authors:** Olga Grabowska-Chenczke, Anshu Rani, Ewelina Marek-Andrzejewska, Ewa Kiryluk-Dryjska

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/bs16030384 · Behavioral Sciences · 2026-03-07

## TL;DR

This study uses eye-tracking to explore how emotional content in food bank posters affects donors' attention and perceptions.

## Contribution

The first eye-tracking study on donor-facing food bank communications in Poland, applying social neuroscience methods.

## Key findings

- Participants focused more on pictures than logos or symbols, with large effect sizes.
- Negative emotion posters received the strongest pictorial attention, aligning with negativity bias.
- Past charitable behavior did not correlate with visual attention patterns, supporting the universality of the Picture Superiority Effect.

## Abstract

This exploratory eye-tracking study investigates how the emotional content of food bank advertisements influences food donor perception and visual attention. It does so by addressing a gap in the literature on eye-tracking applications in food donation contexts and social neuroscience. Visual attention represents a fundamental behavioural precursor to decision-making, yet its role in charitable communications remains underexplored. The objective of this research was to investigate how the content of food bank advertisements is associated with the way that potential food donors perceive food bank posters on a cognitive level. This study adopted a social neuroscience approach, using the methodology of eye-tracking to examine the visual attention patterns that form while viewing food bank posters. Participants (N = 96) viewed four posters varying in their emotional appeal, i.e., positive, neutral, negative and cognitive dissonance, while their eye movements were being recorded. Results revealed the robust attentional prioritisation of generic pictorial content over specific organisational logos or abstract symbols across all metrics and posters with large effect sizes (r = 0.69–0.87). It was found that pictures captured participants’ attention three to seven times faster than logos and also received two to seven times more fixations. The poster carrying a negative appeal elicited the strongest pictorial advantage, consistent with the negativity bias in attention allocation. Exploratory analysis found no significant correlation between participants’ past charitable behaviour and visual attention patterns, thus suggesting that the Picture Superiority Effect operates universally, regardless of individual past charitable behaviours. This is the first eye-tracking study examining donor-facing food bank communications in Poland, contributing to social neuroscience approaches in prosocial behaviour research. Findings suggest charitable organisations should prioritise emotionally engaging pictures’ inclusion over logo prominence in their visual communications messaging.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023464/full.md

## Figures

7 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023464/full.md

## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023464/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13023464