The origins of the concept are unclear. Some attribute it to a marketing expert by the name of Dan Herman, who preempted the idea in 1996. While others credit the term to US Harvard student, now turned entrepreneur and venture capitalist, Patrick J. McGinnis. Regardless of its beginnings, this concept is defined by British psychologists as "the pervasive apprehension that others might be having rewarding experiences from which one is absent". In other words, the feeling of fear or panic that comes from thinking that we are missing out on something good.
The medical community has extensively researched the impact of FOMO on health, particularly among the youth, classifying it as a form of social anxiety. This anxiety stems from the fear of missing out on experiences that others are enjoying and consequently being unable to share. In today's social media era, this syndrome has intensified with individuals feeling the need to stay glued to their smartphones all day to see if anything interesting happens. FOMO is about fearing to miss every moment of the lives of friends and strangers on TikTok, Instagram, or Meta. Or the regret of not sharing one's moments, not attending that concert your brother-in-law went to, not being one of the first to buy the latest smartphone model, or missing an opportunity to make savings profitable.