Dilated Pupils: 10 Messages My Pupils are Sending You
1. I’m thinking hard
Look into my eyes and ask me to name the cigar-smoking
founder of psychoanalysis and you won’t see much change in my pupil size. The
name Sigmund Freud comes easily to my lips.
But ask me to explain the laws of cricket and watch my
pupils expand.
That’s because research has shown that the harder your brain
works, the more your pupils dilate. When Hess and Polt (1964) gave
participants more and more difficult tasks to complete, their pupils got bigger
and bigger.
2. My brain is overloaded
Keep watching my eyes closely and you’ll spot the point when
explaining the laws of cricket gets too much.
Poock
(1973) reported that when participants’ minds were loaded to 125% of
their capacity, their pupils constricted.
It’ll be trying to explain a googly that will do it. (Don’t
ask).
3. I’m brain damaged
The reason doctors and paramedics flash a light in patients’
eyes is to check their brains are working normally (and because it’s such an
easy test to do). They use the acronym PERRL: the Pupils should be Equal, Round
and Reactive to Light.
If my brain is broken, say, because I’ve had a bump on the
noggin, you won’t see PERRL. There may well be other extremely subtle clues,
like the blood pouring from my head.
4. You’re holding my interest
The size of my pupils can also signal whether I’m interested
in what you’re saying.
White and Maltzman (1977) had participants listening to
excerpts from three books: one was erotic, another involved mutilation while a
third was neutral.
Their pupils widened at first for all three. But they only
remained wide for the passages that were erotic or involved mutilation.
I’m likely to be interested in anything new, so my pupils
will dilate a bit at first, but they’ll only stay dilated if I continue to be
interested.
5. You’re turning me on
If things take a sexual turn then our eyes are also
involved. Both men and women’s pupils expand when they are sexually
aroused (e.g. Bernick
et al., 1971).
However, not everyone agrees big pupils are a signal of
sexual arousal. It tends to get tested by showing nude pictures to people and
some argue that we’re just really interested in the nude form.
6. You disgust me
Just as my pupils increase in size when I’m interested or
turned on, so they constrict when I’m disgusted.
Hess (1972) showed people pictures of injured children.
First people’s pupils dilated because of the shock and then they constricted to
try and avoid the troubling images.
7. Whether I’m liberal or conservative
Should you happen to be carrying around pictures of
politicians you might be able to work out whether I’m a liberal or a
conservative just from my pupil size.
Barlow (1969) showed people pictures of Lyndon Johnson,
George Wallace and Martin Luther King, Jr.. The liberals’ pupils dilated when
they saw fellow liberals Johnson and King but constricted when they saw
conservative Wallace. Conservatives showed the opposite pattern.
8. I’m in pain
If you’ve had enough of this article now and want to cause
me some pain in return, then why not stab me with a pencil? If you’re watching
closely you’ll see my pupils dilate.
Chapman
et al. (1999) fired small electric shocks into people’s fingertips and
measured how much their pupils dilated. At maximum intensity the pupils dilated
by about 0.2mm.
But that was only to a relatively tame current. Imagine what
you could do to my pupils if you plugged me into the mains.
9. I’m on drugs
…and you can narrow down the type by looking at my pupils.
Some drugs, like alcohol and opioids cause the pupils to
constrict. Others, like amphetamine, cocaine, LSD and mescaline cause them to
dilate.
Police officers know this and some use it as one way of
checking if someone is off their face. They generally look for pupils
constricted to either less than 3mm or dilated to more than 6.5mm (Richman et al. 2004).
10. My personality
This one is not strictly related to pupil dilation, but it’s
too good to leave out.
If you look closely at the coloured part of my eye, the
iris, you might even get some clues as to my personality (Larsson et al., 2007).
Look closely for ‘crypts’ in my eyes (lines going away from
the iris, labelled 1 above) and this suggests I’m a warm, tender-minded person.
If you see furrows (labelled 3 above), then, watch out, I’m impulsive.
It seems that the same gene, Pax6, which affects part of the
brain associated with approach-related behaviours (the left anterior cingulate
cortex, if you really want to know) also induces tissue deficiencies in
the iris.
Too small to see?
As you’ll have noticed, the same pupil response can mean
different things, although generally when the pupils dilate it sends a positive
message and when they constrict it’s a negative one. But exactly what it means
depends on the situation (and whether someone has turned on a light).
This is all good fun to know, but can we really detect these
tiny changes in people’s pupil size?
According to an fMRI imaging study, change in pupil size may
be difficult for us to notice consciously, but we do seem to pick up on these
very small changes unconsciously (Demos et al., 2008).
So changes in pupil size may be experienced, along with
other verbal and nonverbal signals, as a gut instinct to either approach
someone or run like hell.
Whether or not the eyes are windows to the soul, the pupils
are certainly windows to the mind.
source:
http://www.spring.org.uk/
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