Without a discussion of different cultural aspects, and how eye contact is not as common in many other cultures, I’m not sure how generalizable this study is. I would also like to see a sociocultural breakdown of the participants, and was there proportionate selection
Cultural contextualization is often omited in this kind or research, and I think he is right to underline it. I agree : we can find a lot of science work taking for universal some local or date behaviour.
And why would this kind of thinking would be banned of hn? It's clearly a legitimate epistemological question.
It's not. I'm just tired of undifferentiated, “but what about” comments.
It's so generic and overused that I have started tuning it out. What about eye contact in other culture is different?, which cultures?, what drove those differences?
There are literally thousands of human cultures. The job of assessing the cultural differences rests on the study authors, or just specify in the title that the study is American or Western centered.
First, note that all participants were from a single college in the US
> Participants. In this study, 186 subjects comprising 93 dyads (mean age: 19.38 y;
120 females) participated. Subjects were recruited from Dartmouth College
and were compensated either monetarily or with extra course credit for
participation. The study was approved by the Committee for the Protection of
Human Subjects Institutional Review Board at Dartmouth College, and in-
formed consent was obtained prior to the start of the study. After the study
had concluded, subjects indicated consent to the release of the videos
obtained during their conversations for use in scientific presentations or
publications. All subjects had normal or corrected-to-normal vision
Unfortunately the study makes a very broad conclusion, without mentioning its American focus or otherwise weighting cultural factors, not in the title, not in the conclusion, nor anywhere in the paper. No matter how tired you might be about this point, the study authors had a job and they didn't do it or even acknowledged this issue.
Sadly many people don't understand just how different cultures can be, I think this is part of the goal of having so many classes in undergrad that don't count towards the major. That's the whole idea of trying to make someone "well rounded". If you take classes in the humanities you get a glimpse of the variation. Some of those classes even discuss how many cultures aren't considered when doing studies like this
In eastern Asian cultures, eye contact is not made from a subordinate to someone up the hierarchy as a way to respect. In Islamic cultures, men and women should not make eye contact out of modesty and respect. “American” (really “white” culture) culture is very shouty, self-promotion driven, which is not universally shared and could be viewed as disrespectful to make eye contact by other cultures.
The participants were 186 people at Dartmouth who were paid. I'd wager >50% freshmen studying psychology. That's how a great deal of this sort of science works - when I was a freshman psych major at Stanford we got extra credit in some entry level classes for participating.
And both people need it, so when you're trying to make eye contact, the other party's system will automatically make eye-contact with you (slightly delayed so it doesn't look they've been staring at you the entire time) and vice versa. Who looks away first though?
If the meeting attendees are laid out in a grid presumably it could tell when you’re looking at a specific person. Ideally it’d only send the corrected stream to the person being looked at.
I just can't stop glancing back to myself. I always wonder about people who look at the same spot without glancing away frequently - do they have the self control that I lack, or do they just have their camera right near their own face and are looking at themselves the whole time?
A company I was interviewing had a document they shared with applicants with interviewing guidance. One tip was to look directly into the camera when speaking so the interviewer feels you are present and attentive. Imagine two people looking at a camera instead of each other in an absurd attempt to make video chat more natural.
That is the opposite of my experience on the spectrum. I am hyper aware of people's body language and vocal patterns. My peripheral vision is just as effective if not more effective at "listening" to people because with full eye contact there is an extreme sense of intimate attention that subdues a lot of my other sensory inputs. Every other autistic person I know, have known, and the one I have married experiences this the same way, and would also disagree about them not having a lot of mental space for shared attention. Attention is just expressed differently.
Yeah, exactly. The sensory inputs that are subdued are the "self-bubble". Extreme attention paid to people from an emotional distance is heightened because it's processed through fear, like a prey animal.
The "extreme sense of intimate attention" is shared attention, where the we overtakes the me. It feels overwhelming because you don't want to give up the self-bubble - don't have the mental space for shared attention. Plus the autistic logic is self-reinforcing. Acting as though other people are predators, and their attention is dangerous, feeds on itself.
I think I understand where you are coming from, but I don't think those generalizations about autistic people are accurate. I think there are some autistic people for which these might apply, but most of us are just hyperaware of our surroundings — including other people's body language and intonation patterns. Eliding eye contact in a conversation is less about a feeling of predator/prey and more about the multiple swimlanes of input we're concurrently processing. Think more along the lines of day-dreamers and space-cases rather than wallflowers avoiding social contact.
Shared attention is not something I nor other autistic people I know struggle with. Misplaced attention — toward our slow responses, toward our lack of eye contact, toward the way we choose to engage with others — is absolutely something we deal with on a day-to-day basis, primarily because people tend to have these rigid assumptions of how life is experienced through our senses.
(Re horseshoe theory: I think more people should consider horseshoe theory when considering left vs right rhetoric, but I'm not sure how it applies here)
28 comments
[ 1.4 ms ] story [ 74.2 ms ] threadI'm tired of hearing this generic statement. Eye contact is used differently in different cultures, but it is important in all of them.
If you have a specific point you want to make please make it.
It's so generic and overused that I have started tuning it out. What about eye contact in other culture is different?, which cultures?, what drove those differences?
First, note that all participants were from a single college in the US
> Participants. In this study, 186 subjects comprising 93 dyads (mean age: 19.38 y; 120 females) participated. Subjects were recruited from Dartmouth College and were compensated either monetarily or with extra course credit for participation. The study was approved by the Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects Institutional Review Board at Dartmouth College, and in- formed consent was obtained prior to the start of the study. After the study had concluded, subjects indicated consent to the release of the videos obtained during their conversations for use in scientific presentations or publications. All subjects had normal or corrected-to-normal vision
Unfortunately the study makes a very broad conclusion, without mentioning its American focus or otherwise weighting cultural factors, not in the title, not in the conclusion, nor anywhere in the paper. No matter how tired you might be about this point, the study authors had a job and they didn't do it or even acknowledged this issue.
I think we'd need some kind of eye-tracking system which can detect when I'm trying to make eye contact, and then actually make eye contact for me.
The "extreme sense of intimate attention" is shared attention, where the we overtakes the me. It feels overwhelming because you don't want to give up the self-bubble - don't have the mental space for shared attention. Plus the autistic logic is self-reinforcing. Acting as though other people are predators, and their attention is dangerous, feeds on itself.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horseshoe_theory
The universe is shaped exactly like the earth
If you go straight long enough you'll end up where you were
Shared attention is not something I nor other autistic people I know struggle with. Misplaced attention — toward our slow responses, toward our lack of eye contact, toward the way we choose to engage with others — is absolutely something we deal with on a day-to-day basis, primarily because people tend to have these rigid assumptions of how life is experienced through our senses.
(Re horseshoe theory: I think more people should consider horseshoe theory when considering left vs right rhetoric, but I'm not sure how it applies here)