Deccan Chronicle

Walk in step for better interactio­n

Even walking side-by-side may help alter strangers’ relation

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Tokyo, Feb. 23: Walkers may use step synchronis­ation as a form of non-verbal social communicat­ion, according to a study which suggests that the activity may reveal the psychologi­cal effects of movement interactio­n between humans. The study, published in the journal Plos One, demonstrat­ed how people’s traits and the first impression affect their synchronou­s walking as a way of nonverbal communicat­ion.

In the study, the researcher­s, including those from Tohoku University in Japan, divided participan­ts into 10 single-gender groups — five female and five male.

They said group members took turns being paired up with other members, and they walked together along a quiet, barrier-free path wearing voice recorders and motion sensors which recorded their walking movements.

The scientists carried out the experiment under three conditions.

In one, they took a half silent walk half conversati­on condition where the participan­ts did not speak for half of the journey, yet conversed on the way back, the researcher­s said.

In the other, the participan­ts took a silent walk where they did not converse for the entirety of the journey, and lastly, a non-walking condition where participan­ts did not walk, and sat quietly filling in a questionna­ire in a classroom, the study reported.

According to the researcher­s, the participan­ts had no prior knowledge of each other, and were asked to rate their impression of their partners before and after each walk using the interperso­nal judgment scale (IJS).

They also misled the participan­ts about the true nature of the study to prevent them from intentiona­lly synchronis­ing their steps.

According to the study, there was an increase in the impression ratings for the two groups of participan­ts who walked together, but not for the group of participan­ts who simply spent time together, suggesting that walking sideby-side, even without verbal communicat­ion may be sufficient to alter the social relation between two strangers.

THE STUDY, published in the journal Plos One, demonstrat­ed how people’s traits and the first impression affect their synchronou­s walking as a way of nonverbal communicat­ion.

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