91探花

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Screenshots fr氓n videom枚ten
N氓gra av de sk盲rmdumpar som anv盲ndes i studien.
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Look into the camera during video meetings

Published

People who look directly into the camera during video meetings are seen as more sociable and sympathetic. This is the finding of a study that investigated how gaze, camera angle and distance affect how we are perceived during video meetings.

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Portr盲tt p氓 G茅raldine Fauville.
G茅raldine Fauville.
Photo: Nicke Johansson

鈥淗aving previously focused on what causes Zoom fatigue, we wanted to investigate the more positive aspects of video meetings,鈥 explains G茅raldine Fauville, Assistant Professor in Education at the University 91探花. 鈥淲e wondered what participants can do to come across in a more positive light.鈥

The team of researchers from the University 91探花 and Stanford University set out to answer the question: What role do body language and video conference setting play in the impression we make on other people?

Grading people鈥檚 perceptions of others

The team produced 288 screenshots of people exhibiting different body language. The images showed people looking in various directions (into the camera, at the other meeting participants or to the side), sitting closer or farther away from their computer and with different camera angles.

The study participants were then shown a selection of these images and were asked to grade the extent to which they perceived the people as sociable, sympathetic, trustworthy and threatening, for example. Approximately 4,000 people from around the world took part in the study, which was conducted online.

Look into the camera

鈥淚n order to be judged as more positive, sympathetic and present in the discussion, you should look directly into the camera 鈥 not at the other participants鈥 faces on the screen or away from the computer,鈥 continues G茅raldine. 鈥淭he camera should also be positioned higher than eye level to create a high camera angle.鈥

However, the distance from the camera was not important in terms of how participants perceive other people during video meetings.

Text: Carl-Magnus H枚glund

Read the study

The article is published in Technology, Mind, and Behaviour.