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Westerners view handshaking more positively than East Asians

News Agencies 6 July 2017, 11:53 IST

Westerners view handshaking more positively than East Asians

A team of researchers has found that handshaking is viewed more positively by the Westerners than the East Asians.

Western men also rate handshakes initiated by men and women differently, the study found.

"We know from previous studies that handshaking positively affects people's first impressions and evaluations of others," said U. of I. graduate student Yuta Katsumi.

The team showed 88 Western and East Asian men and women short videos of two avatar characters -- a "guest" and a "host" -- interacting in a business setting. The characters either shook hands at the beginning of the meeting or started their interaction without a handshake. After watching each video, participants were asked how interested they would be in doing business with the video's host, and how competent he or she seemed to be.

"Handshaking is an inherently Western behaviour customary in business contexts, and it's also a historically male behaviour," Katsumi said. He hypothesized that expectations about handshakes would change how positively people rated social interactions in the videos.

The team found that, compared with East Asians, Western participants had more positive evaluations of social interactions involving handshakes. The team also saw that Western men and women evaluated the situations differently. Western women rated all interactions with handshakes more positively than those without. Western men evaluated male hosts less positively when they did not shake hands, but they rated female hosts equally positively regardless of whether a handshake occurred.

"Our results show that in Western males there is a clear expectation to shake hands during first encounters with other males," Florin Dolcos said. "But they don't seem to be affected by the absence of a handshake when interacting with females. This is clear evidence of how subtle things that might seem trivial can make a big difference in daily social interactions."

The research is reported in the Journal of Nonverbal Behavior.

-ANI

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