<p><i>Hypergaze</i>—the perception of being stared at simultaneously by multiple colleagues during video conferencing—has been linked to workplace stress. In nature, sustained direct eye gaze often connotes threat. We propose that evolved social defenses to perceived social threat explain burnout triggered by hypergaze. We further suggest that this response reflects an evolutionary mismatch between the modern workplace and our social instincts. The purpose of the current study is to test the relationship between hypergaze, videoconferencing features, social rank and competition-related variables, and burnout. Participants (<i>N</i> = 256) completed an online survey comprised of burnout, videoconference variables, and variables related to social rank and competition. Hypergaze—along with several social rank, competition, and video conferencing variables—predicted burnout. Negative gossip mediated the hypergaze-burnout relationship, while perceived social rank moderated the relationship. Results support the hypothesis of burnout as an evolved social defense. They further suggest that hypergaze stress reflects an evolutionary mismatch in which videoconferencing activates evolved psychological mechanisms related to rank, social competition, and threat detection.</p>

错误:搜索内容不能为空,请输入英文关键词
错误:关键词超出字数限制,请精简
高级检索

Threat Detected: Hypergaze and the Evolutionary Roots of Burnout on Video Calls

  • Hector Garcia,
  • Jarad Reiss,
  • Ray Garza

摘要

Hypergaze—the perception of being stared at simultaneously by multiple colleagues during video conferencing—has been linked to workplace stress. In nature, sustained direct eye gaze often connotes threat. We propose that evolved social defenses to perceived social threat explain burnout triggered by hypergaze. We further suggest that this response reflects an evolutionary mismatch between the modern workplace and our social instincts. The purpose of the current study is to test the relationship between hypergaze, videoconferencing features, social rank and competition-related variables, and burnout. Participants (N = 256) completed an online survey comprised of burnout, videoconference variables, and variables related to social rank and competition. Hypergaze—along with several social rank, competition, and video conferencing variables—predicted burnout. Negative gossip mediated the hypergaze-burnout relationship, while perceived social rank moderated the relationship. Results support the hypothesis of burnout as an evolved social defense. They further suggest that hypergaze stress reflects an evolutionary mismatch in which videoconferencing activates evolved psychological mechanisms related to rank, social competition, and threat detection.