Have you ever noticed how naturally we look into someone’s eyes during a conversation?
Eye contact and facial expressions play a crucial role in how we communicate emotions and connect with others. But what happens when this instinctive social process is disrupted?
In mental health conditions like schizophrenia and First Episode Psychosis (FEP), this fundamental form of human connection can be significantly impaired. Researchers have long struggled to study these real-time social interactions in a laboratory setting—until now.
Breaking Barriers: Studying Real-Time Eye Gaze in Psychosis
Researchers at Yale University’s Hirsch lab have developed a groundbreaking method to study live, emotionally rich interactions using a novel two-person setup. In this study, two participants engage face-to-face. One is the "movie watcher," and the other is the "face watcher."
The movie watcher views short video clips categorized as “adorable,” or “creepy”. For example, a clip of a puppy might elicit a smile, while a decaying object could trigger a frown or grimace. After each video (lasting around 4 seconds), the movie watcher is instructed to look directly at the face watcher or slightly off to the side, mimicking everyday social interactions. The face watcher, meanwhile, always looks directly at the movie watcher’s face.
This interactive setup provides an ideal framework to study the social brain in action.
Measuring Brain Activity with FNIRS
To understand what's happening in the brain during these interactions, the face watcher wears a cap equipped with Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (fNIRS) technology. This non-invasive neuroimaging tool tracks brain activity by measuring blood flow changes in the cortex, particularly in areas related to social cognition, such as the right temporo-parietal junction (rTPJ).