0000000000185943

AUTHOR

Hiroshi Ashida

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Effect of Gaze on Personal Space: A Japanese–German Cross-Cultural Study

2018

In East Asian cultures, people maintain larger interpersonal distances than in European or American cultures. We investigated whether a preference for averted gaze might be responsible for this difference. Typically, when measuring interpersonal distance, participants are asked to maintain eye contact. This request might bias findings due to cultural differences in the interpretation of direct gaze. We had Japanese and German participants adjust preferred interpersonal distance in a standardized laboratory task, using averaged faces with straight-ahead or averted gaze direction. In line with previous findings, Japanese participants preferred overall larger interpersonal distances, and fema…

Cultural StudiesSocial Psychology05 social sciences050109 social psychologyInterpersonal communicationGaze050105 experimental psychologyPreferencelanguage.human_languageGermanPersonal spaceAnthropologylanguageCross-cultural0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesEast AsiaPsychologySocial psychologyJournal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
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