The Impact of Eye-to-Eye Contact on Social Behavior

A study conducted by researchers from McGill University and Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) found that although eye-to-eye contact is rare during face-to-face interactions, it plays a crucial role in shaping social behavior. Participants in the study spent only 12% of the conversation time engaging in interactive looking, with mutual eye-to-eye contact occurring only 3.5% of the time. However, the time spent looking directly into each other's eyes predicted subsequent gaze-following, indicating that eye contact conveys important social messages. The findings highlight the significance of eye-to-eye contact in communication and suggest avenues for further research on the content and variability of eye gaze in different interactive contexts.
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