PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Eye contact may make people more resistant to persuasion

2013-10-02
(Press-News.org) Making eye contact has long been considered an effective way of drawing a listener in and bringing him or her around to your point of view. But new research shows that eye contact may actually make people more resistant to persuasion, especially when they already disagree. The new findings are published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

"There is a lot of cultural lore about the power of eye contact as an influence tool," says lead researcher Frances Chen, who conducted the studies at the University of Freiburg, Germany, and is now an assistant professor at the University of British Columbia. "But our findings show that direct eye contact makes skeptical listeners less likely to change their minds, not more, as previously believed," says Chen.

To investigate the effects of eye contact in situations involving persuasion, Chen and colleagues took advantage of recently developed eye-tracking technology.

They found that the more time participants spent looking at a speaker's eyes while watching a video, the less persuaded they were by the speaker's argument – that is, participants' attitudes on various controversial issues shifted less as they spent more time focusing on the speaker's eyes.

Spending more time looking at the speaker's eyes was only associated with greater receptiveness to the speaker's opinion among participants who already agreed with the speaker's opinion on that issue.

A second experimental study confirmed these findings.

Participants who were told to look at the speaker's eyes displayed less of a shift in attitudes than did those participants who were told to look at the speaker's mouth. The results showed that participants who looked at the speaker's eyes were less receptive to the arguments and less open to interaction with the advocates of the opposing views, and were thus more difficult to persuade.

According to Julia Minson of the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, co-lead researcher of the studies, the findings highlight the fact that eye contact can signal very different kinds of messages depending on the situation. While eye contact may be a sign of connection or trust in friendly situations, it's more likely to be associated with dominance or intimidation in adversarial situations.

So, while we might be tempted make the demand, "Look at me when I'm talking to you!" of a listener, this demand may have unintended consequences:

"Whether you're a politician or a parent, it might be helpful to keep in mind that trying to maintain eye contact may backfire if you're trying to convince someone who has a different set of beliefs than you," says Minson.

The researchers are planning to look at whether eye contact may be associated with certain patterns of brain activity, the release of stress hormones, and increases in heart rate during persuasion attempts.

"Eye contact is so primal that we think it probably goes along with a whole suite of subconscious physiological changes," says Chen.

###

For more information about this study, please contact Frances S. Chen at: frances.chen@psych.ubc.ca.

Co-authors on the study include Julia Minson of the Harvard Kennedy School, and Maren Schöne and Markus Heinrichs of the University of Freiburg.

The article abstract is available online: http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/09/25/0956797613491968.abstract

F. S. Chen is supported by a research fellowship from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. M. Heinrichs gratefully acknowledges grant support from the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF; PP001-114788) and the German Research Foundation (DFG; He 5310/1-1).

The APS journal Psychological Science is the highest ranked empirical journal in psychology. For a copy of the article "In the Eye of the Beholder: Eye Contact Increases Resistance to Persuasion" and access to other Psychological Science research findings, please contact Anna Mikulak at 202-293-9300 or amikulak@psychologicalscience.org.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Making eye contact doesn't always help your cause

2013-10-02
New research shows that making eye contact, long considered an effective way of bringing someone to your point of view, may actually make people more resistant to persuasion, especially when they already disagree. "There is a lot of cultural lore about the power of eye contact as an influence tool," says University of British Columbia Prof. Frances Chen, who conducted the research at the University of Freiburg in Germany. "But our findings show that direct eye contact makes skeptical listeners less likely to change their minds, not more, as previously believed." Chen ...

Microbial restoration of the inflamed gut

2013-10-01
This news release is available in German and German. About two million people in Europe suffer from chronic inflammatory bowel diseases, which are characterized by progressive tissue destruction and that often necessitate removal of sections of the intestine. The exact causes of Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, the most common forms of these diseases, are still largely unknown. In addition to genetic and environmental as well as lifestyle factors, a disturbed intestinal microbiota is responsible for triggering the disease. Complete recovery is often not possible. ...

New findings on combined radiation injury from nuclear disaster

2013-10-01
MAYWOOD, Il. – A nuclear bomb or nuclear reactor accident can produce a deadly combination of radiation exposure and injuries such as burns and trauma. Now the first study of its kind in 50 years is providing new insights into this phenomenon, called combined radiation injury (CRI). Researchers at Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of Medicine have shown how CRI causes the intestines to leak bacteria into surrounding tissue. The study also showed that radiation and burns have a synergistic effect that make them far more deadly when they act in combination. The ...

'Waviness' explains why carbon nanotube forests have low stiffness

2013-10-01
A new study has found that "waviness" in forests of vertically-aligned carbon nanotubes dramatically reduces their stiffness, answering a long-standing question surrounding the tiny structures. Instead of being a detriment, the waviness may make the nanotube arrays more compliant and therefore useful as thermal interface material for conducting heat away from future high-powered integrated circuits. Measurements of nanotube stiffness, which is influenced by a property known as modulus, had suggested that forests of vertically-aligned nanotubes should have a much higher ...

ForWarn follows rapidly changing forest conditions

2013-10-01
U.S. Forest Service and partner scientists are keeping a watchful eye on forest health. As fall colors replace the lush greenness of spring and summer, researchers recognize telltale signs of change in healthy forests. A new publication highlights specific examples where researchers have used ForWarn, a state-of-the-art forest change recognition and tracking system, to detect disturbances and track forest recovery. ForWarn uses NASA satellite imagery to develop real-time maps that assist forest managers in the continental United States. Since 2010, ForWarn has detected ...

JCI early table of contents for Oct. 1, 2013

2013-10-01
Hemin and sickle cell disease-associated acute chest syndrome development Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is a complication of sickle cell disease that is characterized by sudden pain and difficulty breathing. Sickle cell disease can also cause red blood cells to suddenly breakdown and release their contents, which may trigger the onset of ACS. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Solomon Fiifi Ofori-Acquah and colleagues at Emory University asked if hemin, a product released by red blood cells during lysis, triggers ACS in a mouse model of sickle cell ...

Hemin and sickle cell disease-associated acute chest syndrome development

2013-10-01
Acute chest syndrome (ACS) is a complication of sickle cell disease that is characterized by sudden pain and difficulty breathing. Sickle cell disease can also cause red blood cells to suddenly breakdown and release their contents, which may trigger the onset of ACS. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, Solomon Fiifi Ofori-Acquah and colleagues at Emory University asked if hemin, a product released by red blood cells during lysis, triggers ACS in a mouse model of sickle cell disease. They found that hemin injection caused labored breathing, acute lung ...

A link between type 2 diabetes and mitochondrial function

2013-10-01
Type 2 diabetes is a chronic condition that is characterized by resistance to or insufficient production of insulin, a hormone that controls sugar movement into cells. In certain tissues, insulin resistance has been associated with dysfunction of mitochondria, which supply most of the cell's chemical energy. In this issue of the Journal of Clinical Investigation, C. Ronald Kahn and colleagues at Harvard Medical School evaluated mitochondrial involvement in insulin resistance. They found that heat shock protein 60 (HSP60), which is involved in mitochondrial protein import ...

Scientists who share data publicly receive more citations

2013-10-01
A new study finds that papers with data shared in public gene expression archives received increased numbers of citations for at least five years. The large size of the study allowed the researchers to exclude confounding factors that have plagued prior studies of the effect and to spot a trend of increasing dataset reuse over time. The findings will be important in persuading scientists that they can benefit directly from publicly sharing their data. The study, which adds to growing evidence for an open data citation benefit across different scientific fields, is entitled ...

Report: Breast cancer incidence rates converging among white and African-American women

2013-10-01
ATLANTA -- Breast cancer incidence rates increased slightly among African American women from 2006 to 2010, bringing those rates closer to the historically higher rates among white women, according to a new analysis by American Cancer Society researchers. The explanation behind the rise is unclear. The finding is published in Breast Cancer Statistics, 2013 published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. The report and its consumer version, Breast Cancer Facts & Figures 2013-2014, are published biennially and provide ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

MIT engineers develop a fully 3D-printed electrospray engine

Speculum exams unnecessary for HPV screening

Reduced prediabetes in people who ate broccoli compound

Landmark atlas reveals how aging breast tissue shapes breast cancer risk

SHEA supports key federal advisory committees

Neurologic complications of flu nearly 50 times greater for children with underlying neurologic conditions

Killing H5N1 in waste milk — an alternative to pasteurization

NTT Research and Harvard scientists optimize biohybrid ray development with machine learning

Mapping connections in a neuronal network

Study: Air pollution exposure late in pregnancy increases NICU admission risk

Engineers enable a drone to determine its position in the dark and indoors

U-M materials scientist, chemical engineer elected into National Academy of Engineering

Evolutionary tradeoffs: Research explores the role of iron levels in COVID-19 infections

Ecological Society of America selects 2025 EEE Scholars

U.S. stream network is longer during annual high-flow conditions

Seismic techniques reveal how intense storms in 2023 impacted aquifers in Greater Los Angeles

Elephant seals in the Pacific serve as deep-ocean sentinels, revealing patterns otherwise hard to measure

Depression linked with higher risk of long-term physical health conditions

Los Angeles groundwater remained depleted after 2023 deluge, study finds

Foraging seals enable scientists to measure fish abundance across the vast Pacific Ocean

Dessert stomach emerges in the brain

Fungus ‘hacks’ natural immune system causing neurodegeneration in fruit flies

A new view on 300 million years of brain evolution

Birds have developed complex brains independently from mammals

Protected habitats aren’t enough to save endangered mammals, MSU researchers find

Scientists find new biomarker that predicts cancer aggressiveness

UC Irvine astronomers gauge livability of exoplanets orbiting white dwarf stars

Child with rare epileptic disorder receives long-awaited diagnosis

WashU to develop new tools for detecting chemical warfare agent

Tufts researchers discover how experiences influence future behavior

[Press-News.org] Eye contact may make people more resistant to persuasion