Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

Study: Handshaking viewed more positively by Westerners than by East Asians

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Westerners view handshaking more positively than do East Asians, researchers report in a new study. Western men also rate handshakes initiated by men and women differently, the study found.

The research is reported in the Journal of Nonverbal Behavior.        

“We know from previous studies that handshaking positively affects people’s first impressions and evaluations of others,” said U. of I. graduate student Yuta Katsumi, who led the research with U. of I. psychology professors Sanda Dolcos and Florin Dolcos.

U. of I. psychology professor Sanda Dolcos, graduate student Yuta Katsumi and their colleagues found that Western men, in particular, value handshakes – but only with other men.

U. of I. psychology professor Sanda Dolcos, graduate student Yuta Katsumi and their colleagues found that Western men, in particular, value handshakes – but only with other men.

The team showed 88 Western and East Asian men and women short videos of two avatar characters – a “guest” and a “host” – interacting in a business setting. The characters either shook hands at the beginning of the meeting or started their interaction without a handshake. After watching each video, participants were asked how interested they would be in doing business with the video’s host, and how competent he or she seemed to be.

“Handshaking is an inherently Western behavior customary in business contexts, and it’s also a historically male behavior,” Katsumi said. He hypothesized that expectations about handshakes would change how positively people rated social interactions in the videos.

The team found that, compared with East Asians, Western participants had more positive evaluations of social interactions involving handshakes. The team also saw that Western men and women evaluated the situations differently. Western women rated all interactions with handshakes more positively than those without. Western men evaluated male hosts less positively when they did not shake hands, but they rated female hosts equally positively regardless of whether a handshake occurred.

“Our results show that in Western males there is a clear expectation to shake hands during first encounters with other males,” Florin Dolcos said. “But they don’t seem to be affected by the absence of a handshake when interacting with females. This is clear evidence of how subtle things that might seem trivial can make a big difference in daily social interactions.”

The researchers plan to expand on these findings by exploring handshaking versus bowing, a traditional greeting in East Asian cultures. They also are investigating the brain mechanisms behind forming first impressions of people from different ethnic groups.

“This research has very important applications to real life,” Sanda Dolcos said. “Society is so diverse, and we should be mindful of the different traditions and ways of interacting that people are used to.”

The Dolcos Lab is affiliated with the Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology at the U. of I. The University of Illinois funded this research.

Editor’s notes:

To reach Yuta Katsumi, email katsumi@illinois.edu.
To reach Sanda Dolcos, email sdolcos@illinois.edu.
To reach Florin Dolcos, email fdolcos@illinois.edu.

The paper “When Nonverbal Greetings ‘Make it or Break it’: The Role of Ethnicity and Gender in the Effect of Handshake on Social Appraisals” is available online and from the News Bureau.
DOI:  10.1007/s10919-017-0257-0

Read Next

Engineering Portrait of the researchers standing outside on campus.

Model tackles key obstacle to efficient plastic recycling

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Most people who separate their plastic waste for recycling assume the bulk of it will in fact be recycled. But current recycling methods, which “require sorting, grinding, cleaning, remelting and extrusion to obtain plastic pellets, usually lead to lower value materials because of contamination and mechanochemical degradation,” the authors of a new […]

Social sciences Sociology professor Brittney Miles shown in profile with a Black history mural at the Bruce D. Nesbitt African American Cultural Center on campus.in the background.

Black women’s beauty, fashion choices intertwined with Black history, politics

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Black women’s beauty and fashion are complex, meaningful acts, deliberate strategies for engaging with the world that make bold statements about identity, political resistance and empowerment, Black women said in a recent study. Researcher Brittney Miles, a sociology professor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, interviewed 39 Black women about their fashion […]

Uncategorized Rows of MRI images from two patients with brain tumors

New MRI approach maps brain metabolism, revealing disease signatures

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A new technology that uses clinical MRI machines to image metabolic activity in the brain could give researchers and clinicians unique insight into brain function and disease, researchers at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign report. The non-invasive, high-resolution metabolic imaging of the whole brain revealed differences in metabolic activity and neurotransmitter levels […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010