this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2024
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I was thinking it could be used as a kind of exposure therapy to help with that aversion. At least, I'd be willing to try it out for that purpose.
And because I can't help myself from making very dated TV references:
That's what I thought. But I'm not particularly afraid of eye contact, I'm just not good at it. But just reading the article with those pictures made me uncomfortable.
Maybe if it's just one set of eyes staring at me instead of 5 that'd be better.
Have been thinking the same.
I have a serious anxiety when it comes to video calls. My direct colleagues know about it and don't mind, but it is weird when having remote meetings involving other people. This is probably really harming my professional success.
So I was considering trying some Chatroulette like service to get more relaxed towards video calls, but was really put off when hearing about all the offensive sexual weirdness there.
Eyechat would omit that while still being near enough to a classic full-face video-call. I think this might actually work as some kind of exposure therapy. I might give it a try.
Pretty much my thoughts (and experience) as well.
There’s the AI nvidia tool that makes your eyes always looking at the screen. Could be useful for video calls?
It's not the looking-at-th-screen-thing, but rather the switching-the-camera-on-in-the-first-place-thing, the understanding-anything-at-all-while-the-screen-is-covered-in-people-thing and the not-being-a-total-exhausted-mess-who-needs-an-hourlong-pause-to-function-again-afterwards -thing.
So no, wouldn't be useful, I am afraid.