Stuff You Should Know - Selects: What's the Deal With Staring?
Episode Date: February 5, 2022Gazing too long upon another person is almost universally viewed as anywhere from impolite to hostile, which is odd considering science isn't fully certain why we stare - and why we're so good at know...ing when we're being stared at. Learn all about it in this classic episode. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
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I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to
believe. You can find in Major League Baseball, International Banks, K-pop groups, even the White
House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject, something completely unbelievable
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Hey everybody, Chuck here. You ever been in a public place and you notice somebody is staring
at you? Or have you ever been in a public place and stared at somebody? People say it's rude.
You're supposed to tell your kids, don't stare. That's rude. But what's the deal with staring?
It turns out we have a podcast episode from November 17, 2015 called What's the deal with staring?
We're going to answer that for you right now. Please enjoy.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeart Radio.
Hey and welcome to the podcast. I'm Josh Clark. There's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and guest producer
Noel is actually staying in here, I believe. He's staring at us for this one. He is as we speak.
It's making my cheek blush. Just the one though. Yeah, which is weird. It's a tease is what that is.
It's a little bit of a tease. It's not anything. I'm a big tease. Spoiler alert. Okay.
Now that was it. That your cheek is hot. It's a post spoiler alert. Post. I don't know if those
work. Count. I think you can set the internet off into a frenzy if you do it the wrong way.
Oh yes, we've done that before. Oh yeah, that's right. You say spoiler alert beforehand apparently.
Yeah, I thought you just spoiled it and then said spoiler alert. Right. As a tag. Yeah, it's not how it works.
Chuck, yes. Have you ever been to the grocery store?
Yeah, I was there yesterday. Were you? Did you go down the street by cereal?
No. I don't really buy cereal much either. I appreciate cereal. I'm glad it's still around,
but I just don't buy it myself. Every once in a while, I go down the cereal. I was just almost
to visit old friends. Oh, there's the Count Chocula. Exactly. There's Fred Flintstone.
What the heck happened to Lucky the Leprechaun? He doesn't look anything like he did when we were
kids. Look at Tony Tiger. Yes. While I'm walking down the cereal aisle, I notice they don't hold
my gays like they used to actually. Because you're not seven. No. Actually, there's this study
that found, and I think the last couple of years at Cornell University, they have a whole food
psychology program. I love that stuff. And they did a study of, I think, 65 different cereals
and found that the average gays, downward gays, is about a 9.6 degree gays. Right?
Of just your normal human walking? No. In the cereal aisle? In the cereal aisle. So, like,
if you were looking at Tony the Tiger and you were me in our normal adult height,
he wouldn't be locking eyes with us. But if we were little kids, he'd be looking right into our eyes.
Toucan Sam. Toucan Sam. Lucky. Captain Crunch, which we talked about. Yeah. The Honeycombs
Maniac. Yeah. The Golene Fiber Stick. Sure. All of those guys, they look into little kids' eyes
and the whole reason why is because it builds brand trust and brand loyalty. Yeah. Among
cereal boxes where the character is looking right into your kids' eyes on the cereal aisle,
there's, like, a 28% brand loyalty compared to, like, 16% among boxes that don't have little
characters looking into your kids' eyes. And it all just kind of goes to show you,
like, that the stare, even being stared at by a lifeless cardboard cartoon character,
yeah, is that powerful that it can make you say, I want to eat what's inside of you.
Yeah. You know? Sure. So the gaze, it's powerful. Or, like, the old days when I was single and I
would go into a bar and just, like, go right up beside a lady and just stare at her face
until she looked at me. Make your eyes as wide as you possibly could. They love that stuff.
Sure. Very powerful. It shows what a panther you are.
A creep is what that would be. Sure. Yeah. And I mean, that's a really great point. Like, if it's
a leprechaun on a cereal box, you're not threatened or intimidated by it, but there's still some sort
of power to its gaze, right? Yeah. If you're another human being that is so powerful, it has
to be wielded very delicately. Yeah. Because people don't like to be stared at. As this
House of Works article points out, it's simply rude to stare. Yeah. It can be, I mean, depending
on what culture you live in, it can be everything from an intimidation tactic to an affront to,
like, something that's very aggressive. Right. Yeah. It means a lot of things around the world,
but I didn't find a lot of cultures where it was super nice. No. The closest thing I can find
was Argentina being called out as it being socially acceptable for men to stare at women.
That doesn't mean that it's welcome to women. Right. It's not welcome necessarily or wanted,
but it's not like a what are you doing kind of thing. But I couldn't find any culture around
the world where just outright staring is just normal and fine. Right. It seems to be like,
universally, it makes people uncomfortable, it seems like. Yeah. Well, this article, we're going
to draw from a few, but one from our own website. Why is it rude to stare, which I never really
answers, actually. No, it doesn't. It sort of gives some reasons. Stanced around. But I did think
they made a good point, whoever wrote this early on in the article, that humans are constantly
categorizing things when we look around at anything. Right. From inanimate objects,
you know, that desk looks comfortable, or that chair looks nice, or let me lay down on that.
That car is cool, or that person is white. That person is a woman. That person is attractive.
That person isn't like we're always scanning and dropping things into different mental boxes.
Right. And so they make a pretty good point. I think whenever something is just slightly off,
like that person has one leg, it just, the brain has an instinct to stay on that gaze a little
longer. Right. Because it just disrupts the normal, like, that's a thing, that's a thing,
that's a thing, and that's different. So let me look at that for a minute. Right. And the whole
idea behind us walking around constantly scanning our environment is this idea that we've evolved
to, at first, I guess, probably hunt for predators. Remember, in like the gun control episode,
we talked about how humans can recognize a gun in the environment as readily as recognizing
snakes or spiders? Yeah. So we're trained to pluck stuff out of our environment that may or
may not be a threat. Yeah. As we've kind of moved away from the possibility of, you know,
a bear eating you, typically, it still happens infrequently, but for the most part, we're not
threatened by bears, right? That same ability has kind of moved into this social realm,
where that whole in-group, out-group categorization that we've talked about, too, really kind of
comes up. And so we're walking around saying, you're okay, you're all right, you may be a threat,
so I'm going to move over here on the other side of the street. Right. I don't necessarily recognize
you, but we can do all this, like, pretty quickly, right? Sure. But it's like you were saying,
if you see somebody with missing a face, for example, is a good, is a good one. And I read
this wired article that cited a woman who basically was like, her husband shot her in the face,
and she walked around before a face transplant, like missing a significant section of the middle
of her face. Sure. And she just was stared at all the time. She said she had to get used to it.
I'm sure. This article points out that all you're doing necessarily is taking in more information
than you're used to, and we do that by staring. It's a result of saying,
there's more info than I can just get through with a quick glance. I need to look at you a
little while longer. Right. And then there was a study at USC as in Southern California in 2012.
This one makes a lot of sense to me, because I think what you're doing is you're satisfying
a curiosity. Like, I guess Oscar Pistorius is a weird example now that he's gone through that
thing. But let's say, pre that, pre that incident, you would see someone like Oscar, Oscar Pistorius,
and say, wow, I want to see how this guy runs without legs. Right. So I'm going to look at
and put on those blades and, and run. And of course, he's a, you know, it's a spectator sport,
anyway. Right. So you can get away with it. Yeah. But I mean, could it happen any day? Like,
someone who's handicapped, like, I wonder how they drive a car with no legs. Right. So it's
very interesting. So I'm going to look at that and watch them get in the car and
have a specially outfitted car with hand operation. Sure. So it's, it's,
it's weird because it's, in that case, I don't think it's rude, but you're walking a fine line.
But it is still very rude. Another non murderous example, like the second one you gave is,
there was in this study at USC, they use women with novel biological effectors, meaning,
in this case, that their arms hadn't fully developed. But they were performing functions
that people would normally use their hands for with their residual limbs. Right. So someone
might be like, wow, how is she painting or cooking her dinner? Exactly. But at the same time,
you're right. You're walking that fine line. So you're staring, but maybe you look away,
but then you look back and you kind of take it in pieces because we are in this weird position
where we want to take in, but we're also socialized to not stare as well. It's rude.
Well, what they determined in the study, though, which sort of backs up the idea that it is
satisfying a curiosity is they looked at the brains of people like staring at, let's say,
the lady without the formed limbs. And after they looked for a little while, the brain lit up at first
like, Oh my gosh, what am I seeing? This is super interesting. Right. And then the brain
normalized was like, Oh, okay, well, that's how she cooks her dinner. That's really neat. Exactly.
And then they were able to interact normally after that point. So it's almost like, as long as your
brain hasn't gotten enough information to its satisfaction, you're not going to feel comfortable.
There's going to be something weird and different around it. And if you interact with somebody
before you've sat, you're, you've satisfied your brains need to understand what the heck's going on
there, then you might not interact with them as comfortably as you would if you were able to
sit there and take it back. And they did this by having people watch other people through
like a one way mirror, I think, and watch them for a few minutes, their brains, I guess, became
satisfied or figure it out, you know, what the process was. And then after that, they interacted
with the people much more normally than they did before they were able to fully satisfy their
brain's curiosity. Yeah, it's like, this might be a pretty lame example, but it's like, if you have a
huge zit on the end of your nose, right, and you walk into a group of friends for a meeting,
you might say, just get over with, I got this huge zit on my nose, like Fred Savage in Austin
Powers, the mole, the mole, yeah, like acknowledging it. Hey, I got this huge thing. Instead of being
weird about it, just go ahead and take a good gander. Isn't it amazing? Right. And now let's
just act normal. And then nine times out of 10 people are like, Yeah, great. I just put my hand
in front of my face and pretend that nothing's different. Is the makeup not working? Right.
But the thing is, it's, you know, it's it. You know, you people have zits themselves. They're
fairly well understood. And it's transient, you know what I mean? So there is definitely looking
at somebody who is differently abled or just different in any way. It can be considered rude,
especially if that person has to put up with it again and again. But I think there's just not
that understanding of what is the basis of it. And of course, kids are going to do that. And as parents,
you are probably Johnny on the spot by saying, don't stare at that person, that lady without a
face. Right. She, you know, it's not nice. Whereas the kids just thinking like, I've never seen someone
without a face. Right. And the parent, you know, is thinking that same thing, but they're just
having to do the parental thing and, you know, like steal a quick glance. Right. And then tell
the kid not to stare because it's been socialized out of them. Yeah, it's super interesting to me.
But it seems to be innate because kids do it. And then they have to be taught not to do it. Right.
Yeah. So I wonder almost if it's then in that, in that circumstance, if it's like a vestigial trait.
Right. You know, like it's an innate thing that like the kid is responding to the kid's evolutionary
history. Right. But it hasn't been socialized to not do that yet. So there's this social layer
that's being put on top of an evolutionary trait. Yeah. So staring seems pretty straightforward
so far. Right. Actually, it gets way, way more complex. And we will dig into that right after
this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new I Heart podcast, Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself,
what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation? If you do,
you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This I promise you. Oh God. Seriously,
I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband,
Michael. Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot, sexy teen crush boy
band are each week to guide you through life step by step. Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships,
life in general can get messy. You may be thinking this is the story of my life. Just stop now.
If so, tell everybody, everybody about my new podcast and make sure to listen. So we'll never,
ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the I Heart Radio app,
Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Mangesh Atikala. And to be honest,
I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was born, it's been a part of my life. In India,
it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're going to get secondhand astrology.
And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and
pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars, if you're willing to look for it.
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you, it got weird fast. Tantric curses,
major league baseball teams, canceled marriages, K-pop. But just when I thought I had to handle
on this sweet and curious show about astrology, my whole world came crashing down. Situation doesn't
look good. There is risk to father. And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a
skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive
and the I Heart Radio app, Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
So we're back and we're talking about being stared at, which by the way, I didn't get a chance to
listen to it, but Robert and Julie at Stuff to Blow Your Mind did a staring episode a few years
back. They had to stare off? Yeah. Who won? I had that Julie won. I would guess. Yeah. Again,
I don't know. I'm sure they did though, now that you mentioned it. So Chuck, we're talking about
staring and how maybe the evolutionary adaptations to it. And there's a further idea that we've
actually evolved, our eyes have evolved to really understand when somebody's looking at us. Right?
I think it's pretty neat. The gaze detection system? Yeah, they make the point in here. Which
article was this from? This one was from Psychology Today. Basically, the difference,
the main difference between humans and a lot of animals is with people, you can see a lot more
whites of the eye than you can with most animals. So the dark parts, that is the parts that look
at you, you can really tell when those things are moving around. Right, exactly. You can tell
when you're being looked at a lot more easily. Yeah, so like if the dark parts are in the center
of the eye, roughly you can assume that you're being looked at. Sure. If the dark parts are to
the right, the person's looking to the right. If the dark parts are to the left, vice versa. Right?
I'm looking at Noel out of my, I guess you would say peripheral vision. Exactly. So I can relax
because you're not looking at me, you're looking at Noel, so I can go back to knitting or starting
fires, whatever. But Noel needs to be on his best behavior. And that's actually one of the two
suggestions for why we're so responsive to being looked at. Like there's a couple of things. So
with this gaze detection system, they've determined that if you are looking toward me, Chuck,
yeah, but over my shoulder, and I can just kind of tell, right? So your head is looking at me,
your eyes are generally at me, but you're just like a degree or two off. Yeah, like right now,
isn't that weird? Yeah, right now you're saying it is kind of off putting, but right now you're
setting off a different kind of neuron in my brain than you are now that you're looking directly
at me. Now different neurons are firing. Like specific neurons for when someone is looking
right at you fire, which is awesome. Exactly. Like we have basically a region of the brain
dedicated to that. Yeah. And I have to say, you and I are like staring at each other way more
than normal in this episode. Oh, you think? Oh, yeah. Interesting. Or maybe we're just talking
about it more than usual. I'm not sure. The other cool thing is they you tend in your peripheral
vision to notice more when like instead of someone just looking at you straight on with their body
in their face, if someone is looking from the side and turning their head completely to the right
to look at you, that will stand out a lot more in your peripheral vision than someone just standing
staring straight at you. Yeah. Which is super weird. It really is. Today when I was driving in,
there was this woman walking her baby in a stroller down the street. Yeah. Now I was just
looking at her kid and I was driving parallel to her, but my head I'm sure was turned toward them.
She wasn't looking anywhere near me. All of a sudden she turns her head and just completely
like meets my gaze. Yeah. Right. Like she saw somehow probably in her peripheral vision
that there was somebody in a car looking at her kid. Yeah. And she needed to check it out. So she
threw the cover over the stroller real quick and turned around away the other way. She's like,
come on. Yeah. It's I don't know. I find all this stuff fascinating. Like whether or not you can
feel when you're being stared at directly to your back, let's say. Well, that's something
different. So like this all of some up to this point, we've been talking about stuff that can
be explained away using like your peripheral vision, noticing other people's body language,
looking at where the eyes are. Now we're getting into just some weirdness and something called the
psychic staring effect or scopesthesia or the feeling that you're being stared at from behind,
even though there's no way using your normal senses, you should be able to tell that someone
is looking at you. Yeah. And this, there was a paper, this is from the article, The Feeling of
Being Stared At. And there's an old paper from 1898 from Science Magazine called The Feeling of
Being Stared At by Edward Titchiner. Yeah. And he said, and this was sort of a weird feedback
loop, but he said, if you go to the front of a room and you have your back to everyone,
you're going to feel like you're being stared at. And then you're going to get nervous and start
fidgeting around, which will cause people to stare at you. Yeah. So that doesn't do much for me.
He also, he also said it's possible that it's when you think someone's staring at you, you start
to turn around to see them, to catch somebody staring at you or to see who it is. And they'll
then look at you. Right. They notice you moving and they start looking at you before you've made
it all the way around. And you say, see, you were looking at me. Exactly. And you say, no, jerk,
didn't look at you until you turned around and looked at me. Right. And then it just turns
into a fist fight every time, without fail. So Titchiner basically was like, ah, it's all
illusory. It's, it's done. He didn't really write necessarily about all of his methods or study
size or anything like that. But he, he felt like he kind of settled it. 15 years later, there was
a guy who picked it up again. His name was J. E. Coover. He wrote another paper called The Feeling
of Being Stared At. Yeah. And he tried a little more scientifically to figure out what was going on.
And he had a pretty cool, I thought his technique was pretty awesome. It was okay. He would sit there
and have a study participant with his back to him. And he would roll a dice or die. And if it came
up even, he would not stare at them for 15 seconds. If it came up odd, he would stare at them for 15
seconds. And then each time the person needed to write down what they thought, whether they were
being stared at or not. Yeah. And it was, it lined up pretty consistently. But what this
points out and what a few of the other staring studies point out is, if you know you're in a
staring study, you may be more clued in, even if you're blindfolded to think like, oh, you know,
I feel like someone's staring. Right. Because I'm supposed to. Right, exactly. Like you're thinking
about being stared at. Yeah, exactly. So in this J. E. Coover study from 1913, he found that
people guessed at about 50%, they were right, about 50% of the time, which is even with chance,
right? Yeah. So that suggests that you don't really have any kind of signal or sense that
you're being stared at. You're just guessing and you're primed to being guessed. And yeah, like
follow up studies have shown that if people are distracted with another task, or if they don't
think the study is actually about whether or not they're being stared at, they almost never
guessed that they're being stared at. Yeah. It only starts to show up in studies where you're
testing for that sense of being stared at and they're trying to guess. But even then, they're
just guessing at about the same rate as chance. So Tishner and Coover and others later on over
the years have basically suggested that scope of seizure or that feeling you're being stared at
is very widespread. Most people believe that they can tell when somebody's staring at them,
but that it's actually an illusion. Right. That isn't necessarily explained in any of these,
but it is, it is a widespread illusion that humans tend to suffer from universally.
Well, and anecdotally, you might remember the times where I feel like someone's staring at me
and someone is, but not remember the times that you feel like someone's staring at you and you
look up and no one's staring. Yeah. Like you don't catalog that. Well, that was another thing they
found, too, is that there's no, no one's ever found any, any idea that you can tell when you're
not being stared at. It's just, it's just being stared at that we supposed to have a sense for.
All right. Well, let's take another break here and we'll talk about a few more
weird staring studies right after this. Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass. The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions
arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road. Okay, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands
give me in this situation? If you do, you've come to the right place because I'm here to help. This
I promise you. Oh, God. Seriously, I swear. And you won't have to send an SOS because I'll be there
for you. Oh, man. And so my husband, Michael, um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and
a different hot sexy teen crush boy band are each week to guide you through life step by step.
Oh, not another one. Kids, relationships, life in general can get messy. You may be thinking,
this is the story of my life. Just stop now. If so, tell everybody, everybody about my new
podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye, bye, bye. Listen to Frosted
Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you listen to podcasts.
I'm Mangesha Tickler. And to be honest, I don't believe in astrology. But from the moment I was
born, it's been a part of my life. In India, it's like smoking. You might not smoke, but you're
going to get secondhand astrology. And lately, I've been wondering if the universe has been
trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention. Because maybe there is magic in the stars,
if you're willing to look for it. So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you,
it got weird fast. Tantric curses, Major League Baseball teams, cancelled marriages,
K-pop. But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology,
my whole world can crash down. Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father.
And my whole view on astrology, it changed. Whether you're a skeptic or a believer,
I think your ideas are going to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts.
All right. All righty. We're back. And here's a weird staring study.
Yeah, they've done a lot of them.
And this is from an article, the many creepy experiments that involve staring at people.
On I09. Great website. So this one, the stare as a stimulus to flight and human subjects was,
I thought, pretty interesting and kind of a no-brainer. Basically, they would have someone
stand on a corner and then when people would pull up in their car at the light of the stop sign,
they would just stare at them in their car. And then they would time how long it took them to
get the heck out of there when the light turned green. And of course, naturally, they don't even
release the results. I imagine it was about 100% that people sped out of there when the light
turned green. Yeah, they had a control group that they specifically didn't stare at or look at,
and they definitely left that intersection much more slowly.
Yeah, because there's not a creep leering at you on the sidewalk.
Yeah. That's a weird study, but I mean, I guess it added to the scientific body on staring.
By 1%. This one, I thought this was interesting because it actually harkens back to what
Tichner studied too, was that there's this weird part of the psychic staring effect where you
physically, you can feel like you're being stared at, like the back of your neck gets hot.
When I was in college, I used to like, my scalp would get hot or something. I just knew I was
being stared at from behind. And this study found that we produce some sort of physical effect
when we're stared at, right? So in this particular study, they had a psychologist sitting there,
I guess interviewing a person, and then another psychologist would be staring at the person
while they were forced to either read out loud or sing.
Yeah, the person being stared at would have to do those things.
Yeah. Thank you for specifying that. And the other, the second psychologist would stare
like directly at their cheek, and the person would blush all over, especially if they were
having to sing. But the cheek that was being stared at would blush more, it would get hotter.
Like physically, they would measure this. Yeah. It wasn't just anecdotally like,
my right cheek feels hotter. No. And no one has any idea how this happens or why this happens.
But it's almost like the self-consciousness that's produced in being stared at is directed
to the specific part of the body that's being looked at, you know? That's very bizarre that
that happens. Yeah. Well, because they haven't figured it out. No. They'll probably isolate
something at some point. Yeah, eventually they will. But I mean, like if you start to compile
like this body of knowledge on staring, you get the idea that we have a very loose grasp
on the effects of staring and what it what it does and what it signifies and why it's around,
you know? Yeah. It's pretty interesting. I always loved those episodes. I do too. There was this
other study I thought was pretty interesting called Gaydar colon. I gaze as identity recognition
among gay men and lesbians. And I tried to find a copy. I couldn't find one that I didn't have
to pay like 50 bucks for. But I did read some summaries. It basically looks into how gay men
and women use a stare to either assess someone's sexuality or to broadcast their own sexuality.
Right. And it's not always just a fixed gaze, you know, not some like creepy stare. But it was
mixed with like body language and looking away and like a flirtation at times. But I thought
it was pretty interesting. It's definitely not just like some heterosexual concept. Right.
Right. And staring is not just creepy. It's not just for flirting. They've actually found in
other studies that it's a way to ask for help, actually. And it gets results, supposedly. Yeah,
this one didn't make a ton of sense to me. So like if you spilled some groceries, I think,
is what this one study did. Yeah. If you dropped some groceries and you bent over and picked them
up. If you just like kind of keep to yourself and like bend over your groceries and you're
looking down at them and you've got it, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. In this study,
if you look up, though, and are staring at a pastor by while you're doing this,
they take that as an invitation, if not a directive to come help them pick up the groceries and
people respond to that. It's the same thing. Like think about it. Like if somebody is in a situation
where they could use help, but it's also ambiguous, like they kind of got it, but do they really need
help? If they're looking at you, they're broadcasting. Help me. They are. It's just kind of funny
because I'm trying to think of, it just seems like a no brainer. Like if I saw a woman in a
parking lot who had like spilled her groceries and I was walking by and she looked up right at me as
I was passing and picking up, I wouldn't just say like, how you doing? And keep going. Bummer, huh?
Yeah. Boy, you look like you got it under control. Like I would, of course I would stop, but
if she didn't look up, yeah, maybe I would feel like I'm intruding. Exactly.
You know, so she doesn't want me putting her hands on her groceries. Right. And that is like,
that is one of the theories behind why we're so adept at catching other people's gazes. Yeah.
Is that it's a means of communicating nonverbally, very directly, right? So that woman who dropped
her groceries or anybody who drops their groceries, if they're handling themselves,
leave them alone. If they're looking up directly at you, they're communicating with you,
they have spilled their groceries. And what they're saying is I could use some help with some
groceries picking them up. And that's that that theory behind that, the idea that we communicate
and engage in social behavior just from looking is called the cooperative eye hypothesis.
And it's basically this idea. Not a bad band name. Cooperative eye hypothesis. It's a little
wordy, but little like I could see like a math rock band. It's no Kathleen Turner overdrive.
Maybe the best band name of all time. Yeah. But this, this whole thing is that we, we are able to
communicate not just that we need help, but also we tend to follow one another's gaze. If one person
is looking off in the distance and clearly looking at something not zoned out, yeah, yeah, people
are going to look over there. And it's basically the same thing as like a herd of gazelles looking
over at one gazelle on high alert is suddenly looking at. Yeah, you want to, you want to
have some fun, go to New York city or any city and just with one other person and just go stand and
both look up and stare at something and then just sit back. Well, you can't sit back, but have a
friend sit back and watch how many people in New York, of course, they won't stop and look,
but everyone that passes you by will look up and say, what in the world are these two people
looking at? Yeah, what are you looking at? Yeah, what's up there? We just staring at nothing.
You just don't say anything. And then a game of telephone will break out. People will just start
making up what's up there. Yeah, and then it becomes a, what do you call it when people all
get together and dance at one time? Some flash mob, flash mob. Yep. That's an organic flash.
Yeah, you just have a bunch of people staring. It's very boring flash mob. I got one more.
All right. The idea that being aware of being stared at is basically keeps us in line.
The idea that we're being stared at or watched. Oh, makes you behave. Yeah. Another socially,
pro-social motivation. And I got another grocery store example. I was at the grocery store yesterday
and I was walking in the parking lot and this woman had her cart and I noticed her
looking around and she was about to leave her cart right there in the parking lot next to her.
And she saw me looking at her and she just suddenly went and walked it over to the cart
corral. You could tell by her movement she was not playing on going to the cart corral until she
saw me watching her. Yeah. And then she took it to the cart corral and I'm like, yes. Shame.
Exactly. You engage in more ethical behavior if you think you're being watched and that would
explain why we're such a social species. Sure. And just having that heightened awareness that
you're being watched is possibly part of that. Yeah. That's one of my couple of big rules in life
that are meaningless to most people, but always return your cart. Yeah. Don't be one of those
people like, oh, they pay people to go around and get the carts. It's because they have to.
Right. Because of you. And the other thing is always throw your movie theater popcorn and
drinks away on your way out. Oh yeah. The people that just get up and leave the movie theater
with their popcorn bag and their drink there. It's pretty easy. Yeah. I just don't get it.
Like those are, I'm just going to go and say it. Those are the worst people on the planet.
If you want to become canonized, Chuck, not only should you return your cart,
you can do the opposite and take a cart from somebody. So they don't even have to take it
back if you're on your way in. Yeah, I've done that. That's the same level stuff. I rarely use
the big cart though. I do a lot of daily grocery shopping. Yeah. It's a good way to go. It's very
Dutch. Is it? According to the stuff for the next article it is. Yeah. Well, I wear my wooden clogs
and ride my bicycle. It's very astute of you. Thank you. You got anything else? You know what?
This just reminded me. I did have one slight more thing. You've heard of Vitaligo,
what Michael Jackson had, the skin condition where parts of your skin are lighter than others.
I posted on Facebook there was this young woman who has Vitaligo on her arms and she
finally just got a tattoo and lovely script on her forearm that said it's called Vitaligo.
Awesome. And I posted about this and then she apparently listens to the show and she posted
thanks for sharing this, guys. Awesome. That's great. Yeah, I thought it was kind of neat. Yeah.
But I'm curious to hear from people that have, I can't remember what they call them in this
studies, novel. Novel biological effectors. Right. Basically, something unusual physically
that people might be prone to stare at. Yeah. I want to hear from people and how you deal with that
or if you've gotten used to it or if you think it is super rude or if you're like, yeah, I would
stare at me too. Yeah, but that is a great call out. Yeah. And let's see listener mail and then
we'll hit it up again. All right. Hola, todos. My name is Amy and I'm an English teacher living
abroad in Malaga, Spain. I'm a recent fan and only discovered your podcast when I was desperate
for something to listen to on the metro rides. Everybody comes to us out of desperation. The
first podcast I listened to is how Nazis invaded Florida and I haven't stopped downloading. Now,
the real reason I'm sending the emails a little strange. I teach many adult classes. My students
are always asking how they can practice listening to native speakers. Many people don't know that
in Spain, all of the American or English TV series or movies are dubbed. I did not know that
in Spanish voiceover. I figured like a high percentage would be but not all of them, you know.
Yeah. So there isn't aren't many options to practice listening skills. Once I got addicted
to your show, I started suggesting that my higher level students listen to you guys as well. Honestly,
didn't think many of them would actually go home and start listening. However, I was wrong and this
is in all caps. Every single one of them are now addicted like me. That's so awesome. And then back
to regular non all caps. Yeah. So thanks guys. My students want me to send an email to say thank
you for speaking slow, but not too slow and using vocabulary that makes any topic of science,
astrophysics, biology and history easy to understand. I've noticed a big change in their
listening skills and even have the entertainment of teaching some puns and slang that you both
say on the show. It makes class much more enjoyable. The only bad side is now they want a tour of the
UK so we can all come to see you guys live. That's so cool. See everybody in the United States.
Oh, you guys are coming to St. Louis. I can't possibly come see you. People are talking about
traveling from Spain to England to see us. Seriously. Come on. Don't go to Milwaukee. I'm in
Madison. Right. Keep on shelling out this podcast and gracias por todo. Hasta luego. Amy Culver.
Amy, thank you for that. I love that email. That's a great email. Hasta la vista to your class.
Yes. Thank you very much for writing in and that's wonderful. Hope you guys keep listening.
We're known for our slang, aren't we? Get on the trolley, Chuck.
Yeah. That old thing. If you want to get in touch with us to say hi in another language,
that's cool. But like Chuck said, we want to hear from you if you have a novel biological
effector and get stared at and what you do in dealing with that. You can tweet to us at
SOISK podcast. You can join us on facebook.com slash stuff you should know. You can send us an
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Badie. About my new podcast and make sure to listen so we'll never ever have to say bye-bye-bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
or wherever you listen to podcasts. I'm Munga Chauticular and it turns out astrology is way
more widespread than any of us want to believe. You can find in major league baseball, international
banks, K-pop groups, even the White House. But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject,
something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed.
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, give me a few minutes because I think your ideas
are about to change too. Listen to Skyline Drive on the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcasts,
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