Washington DC, April 23: A new study found that eye contact during video calls can elicit similar psychophysiological responses than those in genuine, in-person eye contact. It says that our affective responses to another's eye contact may be quite similar during the video and in-person interaction.
The study led by Tampere University in Finland recently published in the journal Psychophysiology. The researchers compared the reactions caused by seeing another person's direct and averted gaze in three situations: in-person interaction, a video call and just watching a video. In these situations, they measured the participants' skin conductance and activation of facial muscles. Parasites Eat Man's Eye As He Wore Contact Lenses in Shower Making Him Go Blind.
Changes in skin conductance reflect the activation of the autonomic nervous system, which is an indicator of effect, whereas the activation of facial muscles reflects the positivity or negativity of the effect. Corroborating previous studies, in-person eye contact was found to elicit a heightened autonomic arousal response.
More importantly, this eye contact effect was also observed when the other person was seen over a bidirectional video call. When the other person was only seen on video, direct gaze, in contrast, did not similarly activate the autonomic nervous system.
In addition, direct gaze was found to induce facial reactions associated with positive emotion in all three situations. In other words, the mere perception of direct gaze activated the zygomatic or "smile" muscles and relaxed the corrugator or "frown" muscles.
"Our results imply that the autonomic arousal response to eye contact requires the perception of being seen by another. Another person's physical presence is not required for this effect," says Jonne Hietanen, the first author of the study.
"Unexpectedly, we also found that even when the other person was presented just on video, seeing direct gaze elicited the subtle facial reactions of smiling. This suggests that these facial reactions are highly automated responses to eye contact," Hietanen continues.
The results have implications for the use of video calls in everyday situations, even though the researchers caution against too far-reaching conclusions. "Most present-day applications do not permit direct eye contact as the other person is usually seen with a slightly averted gaze. Therefore, it is not clear whether these affective similarities between in-person and video call interactions extend to the use of applications such as Skype," Hietanen adds.
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