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Maintain eye contact
When you keep looking at the audience whilst you act.
no
maintaining eye contact with your audience
maintaining eye contact with your audience
maintaining eye contact
A speaker makes eye contact with his or her audience.
yes
It is generally recommended to avoid reading a speech word for word during a presentation, as it can come across as less engaging and may disconnect you from your audience. Instead, use bullet points or key notes to guide your talking points and maintain eye contact with your audience for better connection and impact.
Eye contact
60percent
All Autistic people have poor eye contact because it is not something that comes naturally to Autistic people. Eye contact has to be learned or mimicked by Autistic people, although even then because it's not something instinctive to us we often cannot maintain normal eye contact and it can be uncomfortable for us to try to maintain eye contact. Autistic children are more likely to have problems with eye contact than Autistic adults because they've yet to learn to mimic neurotypical eye contact or learned coping methods to deal with eye contact.