What do multiplication problems and a picture of a dead body have in common? Each sight will induce slight and irreversible expansion of the pupils within our eyes. This gives observers a subtle yet obvious signal about our thoughts and feelings. After much research into why our pupils dilate, scientists have known our pupils respond to more than mere changes in the light and also display our mental and emotional changes within. In fact, our pupil dilation correlates with arousal so consistently that researchers will now use pupil size, known as pupillometry, in order to investigate psychological phenomena. You’ll no doubt agree that the meaning of pupil dilation runs a lot deeper than originally thought.
Pupil dilation: what …show more content…
The pupils of intelligent people (with intelligence being defined by exam scores) dilated far less in response to a cognitive task than those of a lower intelligence. This was deemed to be due to a much more efficient use of brainpower. Scientists have since used pupillometry in order to assess absolutely everything from sleepiness to schizophrenia and even sexual interest and depression. Whilst they may not have been reading people’s innermost thoughts, they’ve felt rather close especially as it’s been determined that pupil dilation can actually portray an individual’s decision before it’s publicly revealed. This was measured by testing a small group of individuals that had been asked to simply press a button. Results found that pupil size altered with the timing of their decision with the pupil dilation beginning roughly 1 second before the button was pressed and peaked around 1 second after they’d pressed the …show more content…
The general consensus would point towards yes. Researchers have found that you could actually be able to tell if it’s time to leave when you’re on a date simply by looking at their pupils. Although it’s slightly unclear as to what extent this can be exploited due to unrestrained settings (light conditions may change and tough questions may be asked), it can be used in a somewhat light-hearted fashion to help on those awkward first dates. Other efforts to use pupil dilation for purposes outside what has been proven by science have failed. The Canadian officials and their barbaric device for detecting homosexuality during the Cold War is one such example of pupillometry being used to the extreme and unsuccessfully at that. Researchers at Cornell University recently proved that sexual orientation did indeed correlate with pupil dilation when the subjects were shown erotic videos of their preferred gender however this was only when averaged across male subjects. Pupillometry did however become popular in the advertising industry during the 70’s when it was used to test consumer’s responses to TV adverts. This practice was eventually abandoned however when it was noted that there was actually no scientific way to tell whether it measured interest or merely anxiety.
It would seem that outside of the lab, pupillometry is somewhat limited in its abilities when it comes