“…To make eye contact in video interactions, one must look in the direction of the webcam rather than at the target on the screen, which can easily be inhibited by poor webcam placement, on-screen distractions, and a lower intensity stimulus to draw and maintain eye contact (a webcam/screen rather than a live person). Studies of video interviews (Basch et al, 2021; Huang et al, 2022; McColl & Michelotti, 2019), video conferencing (Fauville, Queiroz, Luo, Hancock, & Bailenson, 2022), instructors (Guerrero & Miller, 1998), physicians (Helou et al, 2022), therapists (Pfender & Caplan, 2022), and customer service avatars (Cafaro, Vilhjálmsson, & Bickmore, 2016; Fukayama, Ohno, Mukawa, Sawaki, & Hagita, 2002) revealed positive effects of virtual eye contact on impressions of both warmth and competence. Breil and Böckler (2021) replicated these findings yet also found that the negative impact of averted eye gaze on impressions was mitigated when actors were listening to a negative autobiographical story (an effect they theorize stems from perceptions that the actor was regulating their own emotions, providing an alternative attribution for the negative behavior).…”