Researchers from Queen Mary University of London (QMUL) in the UK used an eye tracking device on almost 500 participants over a five-week period to monitor and judge how much eye contact they felt comfortable with while looking at a face on a computer screen.
They found that women looked more at the left-hand side of faces and had a strong left eye bias, but that they also explored the face much more than men.
Given the very large sample size the researchers suggest this is not due to chance.
"This study is the first demonstration of a clear gender difference in how men and women look at faces," said lead author Antoine Coutrot from QMUL.
We are able to establish the gender of the participant based on how they scan the actor's face, and can eliminate that it is not based on the culture of the participant as nearly 60 nationalities have been tested," said Coutrot.
The participants were asked to judge how comfortable the amount of eye contact they made was with the actor in a Skype-like scenario.
Each participant saw the same actor (there were eight in total) during the testing period, which was around 15 minutes.
At the end of the session the researchers collected personality information about the participants through questionnaires.
"There are numerous claims in popular culture that women and men look at things differently - this is the first demonstration, using eye tracking, to support this claim that they take in visual information in different ways," said Isabelle Mareschal from QMUL.
The study appears in the Journal of Vision.
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