Showing posts with label Eye Accessing Cues. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eye Accessing Cues. Show all posts

Friday, April 2, 2010

Eye Accessing Cue Demonstration

To watch the Eye Accessing Cue Demonstration, click on this link   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rl9sOYPT5UY

Pierto, we’re going to do eye pattern demonstrations with you now.

First question is.

When you were a boy, remember the house where you lived in. What is the colour of the room that you grew up in?

Blue. (Eyes look up and to the left – Visual Recall)

If you think back to that room as well, what colour, what would it look like in your mind, if it was red with pink spots.

Funny. (Eyes look up and to the right – Visual Construct)

Somebody’s voice. Let’s say your mother’s voice. What does your mother’s voice sound like?

That’s it. You can hear her voice in you head right now. (Eyes look sideways and to the left – Auditory Recall)

What would your mother’s voice sound like, if she sounded like Donald Duck?

Odd. (Eyes look sideways and to the right – Auditory Construct)

Imagine. Cause you live in Brighton don’t you? So, what is like if you go down on the beach, just with bare feet walking along the beach?

Hot and steamy. (Eyes look down and to the left – Kinesthetic)

What I like you to do now is to recite the thirteen times table, and that’s it, you recite that table in your mind.

(Eyes look down and to the right – Auditory Digital)

Friday, February 26, 2010

NLP Eye Accessing Cues

It has been said that "the eyes are the mirror of the soul."

Richard Bandler and John Grinder developed a system known in NLP as Eye Accessing Cues that allows us to see inside a person’s mind through her eye movements.

Grinder and Bandler discovered that people involuntarily move their eyes in certain directions as they are accessing information. They noticed that people who were visual tended to look up when accessing their thoughts; auditory people tended to look sideways; and kinesthetic people tended to look down.

The following picture shows the six possible eye movement directions for a right-handed person as you look at them. For left-handed people, the chart is reversed.


The eye movement patterns are explained in greater detail below.

 

This is what you would see if you asked someone to "Imagine a pink elephant in a yellow polka dot skirt”. The person is "Visually Constructing" a pink elephant in a yellow polka dot skirt in her mind.

 

This would be the direction of their eye movement, if you asked someone "What did you eat during lunch yesterday?" The person is "Visually Recalling" what she had for lunch yesterday.


If you asked someone "What would you sound like, if you had Donald Duck’s voice”, this would be the direction of their eye movement. This eye movement indicates “Auditory Construct”. In her mind she is imagining and creating the sound of herself speaking like Donald Duck.


If you asked someone "Can you remember the sound of your father’s voice?” this would be the direction of their eye movement while recalling the sound. This eye movement indicates “Auditory Recall”.


This eye movement indicates a Feeling / Kinesthetic is being created. If you ask someone "What would it feel like to touch a hot stove with your finger?” this would be the direction of their eye movement while they recall the sharp pain of their finger touching a hot stove.


This is the direction of someone's eyes when they are engaged in "Internal Dialogue” or self talk.

How can we use NLP eye accessing cues?

One common use is to establish rapport by noticing where the person's eyes go. If they do a lot of side to side movement which is in the auditory plane, you can use more auditory words in your conversation. If they do a lot of movement in the visual plane, you can use more visual words in your conversation.

Depending upon where their eyes move, you can respond in kind by matching the predicates (nouns, verbs, adverbs) in either visual, auditory or kinesthetic terms. You will have huge rapport with them as you will be speaking with them in their own language. This is called pacing their eye accessing cues.

Eye accessing cues can also be used to determine how truthful or congruent a person is being.

Let's say your child asks you for a candy bar, and you ask them "well, what did your father say?" As they reply "Daddy said... yes" they look to the left (as you look at the child). This would indicate a made up answer as their eyes are showing a "constructed” image or sound. Looking to the right would indicate a "remembered" voice or image, and thus would be telling the truth.