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HomeHealth & Fitness5 Subtle ways eye contact can improve your communication—with people and machines
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5 Subtle ways eye contact can improve your communication—with people and machines

A new Flinders University study shows how timing your eye contact, especially in a look-eye-look pattern, can improve communication with humans and even robots.

July 18, 2025 / 10:13 IST
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Eye contact and gaze patterns can improve how others - humans as well as robots- respond to you. Study reveals simple gaze habits to improve communications (Image: Pexels)

Eye contact can feel awkward, but it turns out, it’s a powerful tool. New research reveals that how and when you use your gaze changes the way others respond, including robots. Whether you're at work, on a call, or talking to AI, learning a few simple gaze habits can help your message land better, and make you feel more connected. Here’s what the study says:

“Where words are restrained, the eyes often talk a great deal,” wrote Samuel Richardson, and science is catching up. Eye contact has long been seen as an important part of non-verbal communication, shaping how you express intent, emotion and attention. But new research suggests your gaze is far more nuanced than previously understood.

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The flicker of a look, its timing, and even its repetition can help guide someone’s understanding, whether you’re asking for help or simply directing attention. And surprisingly, the brain responds similarly, whether that gaze comes from a human, or a robot.

According to a study from Flinders University, researchers observed 137 participants working on a virtual block-building task. They found that the most effective gaze cue followed a specific pattern: look at an object, make eye contact, then return to the object. This sequence made people most likely to interpret the look as a clear call for help. “It’s the context, not just frequency, that makes a gaze communicative,” explains lead researcher Dr Nathan Caruana. Notably, people responded the same way to robots as they did to humans, pointing to how deeply our social brains are wired for gaze.