Avoiding eye contact Look calmly at the interviewer during the conversation.
Not exact matches
Avoid eye contact and don't make any conversation when your child is
looking for your attention.
Avoiding eye contact is a hallmark of this developmental disorder, and researchers have
looked for the cause in the brain's fusiform gyrus region, active in face recognition.
Open body language includes uncrossed arms and legs and
looking at you when you speak, not
looking over your shoulder or
avoiding eye contact.
Some things people do when they are lying is
avoid eye contact, their body language contradicts what they are saying (kind of like someone saying «I'm fine» when they
look upset), how they react to what you're saying, they shift their stance often, they fidget, they cover parts of their face with their hands (like they are trying to hide), they could sweat or even move away from you slowly.
However, if they keep
avoiding eye contact, glancing at the ceiling or
looking around the room, it could be a sign that they would rather be somewhere else.
And that you and management are» — she
looked down at her notes again, this time just to
avoid eye contact — «working around the clock to make the, uh, difficult decisions.»
If it
avoids eye contact with strangers, lowers its head and body,
looks nervous and has its tail between the legs, it may be easily startled into launching an attack.
To get close to primates, Dr Jane Wilson - Howarth
avoids eye contact and she has — surprisingly — managed to
look fierce and dominant when faced with packs of half - wild village dogs in Nepal.
Looking into the camera is important in order to make
eye contact with the interviewer, while speaking clearly into the microphone is helpful for
avoiding repetition.
To
avoid looking like you're staring blankly, hold
eye contact for periods of about 10 seconds before
looking away briefly and then re-establishing
eye contact.
You want to
look confident and professional, so
avoid slouching in your chair, and try to smile and maintain
eye contact with your interviewer too.
Avoid poor (or too persistent)
eye contact, hunched postures, fidgety gestures like picking at your clothes or hair or tapping your feet, or anything that makes it
look like you're nervous.
You want to make
eye contact with the employer and the way to do this is actually to
avoid looking directly at yourself and to
look right into the camera.
Your child may be
looking around (
avoiding eye contact), having a hard time concentrating, have a racing heart and have a shortness of breathe, tense neck muscles, and / or fidgeting.
If they start to
avoid eye contact,
looking around the room, and can't focus on answering my question, it's a good sign they aren't ready to handle some harsh realities.
So I generally resort to
avoiding eye contact with the many elderly shoppers staring at me in disbelief and annoyance that I've ruined their peaceful grocery - procuring experience, while hoping valiantly there'll be a stall offering goodies for us to sample (oooh,
look, Sprog 2... free ice - cream!).