Eye contact: Difference between revisions

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Cultures have different views on what '''eye contact''' means, and how much is "enough" or "too much". Some cultures believe, for some reason, that not looking someone in the eyes is a sign of lying while others consider eye contact rude. Yet in others it is used exclusively for flirting<ref>[https://www.thetravel.com/10-places-where-eye-contact-is-not-recommended-10-places-where-the-locals-are-friendly/ 10 Places Where Eye Contact Is Not Recommended]</ref>.
Cultures have different views on what '''eye contact''' means, and how much is "enough" or "too much". Some cultures believe, for some reason, that not looking someone in the eyes is a sign of lying while others consider eye contact rude. Yet in others it is used exclusively for flirting<ref>[https://www.thetravel.com/10-places-where-eye-contact-is-not-recommended-10-places-where-the-locals-are-friendly/ 10 Places Where Eye Contact Is Not Recommended]</ref>.



Revision as of 11:16, 24 August 2022

This page or section is a stub. Perhaps you can help add something to it? 😊

Cultures have different views on what eye contact means, and how much is "enough" or "too much". Some cultures believe, for some reason, that not looking someone in the eyes is a sign of lying while others consider eye contact rude. Yet in others it is used exclusively for flirting[1].


(This is a stub. Should further sections be divided by country?)

Probably. Maybe we could put some info at the top about eye contact in general, like "Why is eye contact even important in some way or another across cultures", followed by "Why many autistic people hate eye contact", and then further down "culture-specific differences"? --Fochti (talk) 02:37, 24 August 2022 (UTC)

References