concept

face-to-face interaction

Also known as: face-to-face interaction, face-to-face, face-to-face meeting, face-to-face interactions

Facts (8)

Sources
The Children and Screens Guide for Child Development and Media ... childrenandscreens.org Children and Screens 4 facts
claimShimi Kang states that research in human development shows that children who eat dinner with their family, engaging in face-to-face interaction, demonstrate better mental health and academic performance.
perspectiveNot all active forms of digital media use are beneficial; active usage for socializing that replaces face-to-face interaction is not necessarily a positive net use of digital media.
claimSarah Myruski notes that active digital media usage for socializing can have a negative net effect if it comes at the cost of excluding face-to-face interaction.
claimVideo chatting is nearly as socially helpful as face-to-face interaction according to many research studies.
The Evolution of Business Communication - Storytellercharles storytellercharles.com Rachel Jaikumar · Storyteller Charles Feb 11, 2025 1 fact
accountIn the early stages of business, face-to-face interaction was the primary and most efficient mode of communication because businesses operated on a local scale.
A systematic review of cognitive behavioral therapy-based ... frontiersin.org Frontiers 1 fact
measurementThe delivery formats for the therapy programs in the systematic review were: face-to-face (46%), entirely online (38%), blended format (8%), and combined face-to-face plus online versus online (8%).
The SAGE Encyclopedia of the Sociology of Religion - UFO Cults sk.sagepub.com SAGE Publications 1 fact
claimUFO contactees differed in the nature of their claimed communication with aliens, with some reporting in-person, face-to-face meetings, while others claimed to channel extraterrestrial entities or engage in telepathic communication.
The Role of Language in Shaping Social Identity and Cultural ... aithor.com Aithor Apr 24, 2025 1 fact
claimGlobalization has enabled new communicative practices, such as emails, text messaging, and video conferencing, which are not constrained by the requirements of face-to-face interaction.