The chameleon effect is a phenomenon that finds us mimicking the mannerisms, gestures, or facial expressions of the people we interact with most often. It causes you to subconsciously make behavioral ...
A team of researchers at the University of Pisa has found that the "chameleon effect" applies to people initiating use of their smartphone. In their paper published in Journal of Ethology, the group ...
The chameleon effect describes most people's tendency to mimic or mirror another person's facial expressions, nonverbal behaviors, and verbal expressions. We engage in this behavior without even ...
The impulse to check your phone after someone nearby checks theirs is an example of the chameleon effect, new research suggests. Photo by In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images A study published ...
A few years ago, I read something that stuck with me. It talked about what true internal alignment looked like, which was when the gap decreased between the person you are when you’re with friends, ...