Maintaining eye contact with a person while speaking can sometimes be difficult.
A break in eye contact sometimes signals that someone has grown bored with the conversation.
However, researchers suggest that it may be because we are trying to keep our brains from overloading.
Researchers from the Kyoto University in Japan carried out with experiments to learn more about how the phenomenon works.
About 26 volunteers were asked to participate in a common word-association game in which a person was shown a noun and was then asked to immediately respond with a connected verb.
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The researchers then compared responses to the words with how long it took a volunteer to respond and their tendency to break eye contact, 'Medical Xpress' reported.
They found that the volunteers were likely to take more time when responding to harder words, but not as much time if they broke eye contact.
This indicates that the dual task of maintaining eye contact while also racking the brain for a word to meet the request is just too demanding, researchers said.
The study was published in the journal Cognition.
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