pgd wrote:
Regarding the idea of an intense gaze, I do know that a term like staring (involuntary staring) comes up with subtle seizures such as petit mal/absence (and so on). c.
My daughter had an EEG because it really worried her neurologist that an autistic person could make such intense and sustained eye contact. Her neurologist feared that it was actually a small seizure every time she did that (because she's autistic...and making intense eye contact). The EEG was normal. No seizures. It turns out that she's an autistic person who makes intense eye contact.
She does staredowns with cats. It's hilarious to watch. She
always wins. Inevitably, the cats give up staring first and walk away. I tried staring down the very same cats (neighborhood cats) and I broke away before they did. So I tried a staring contest with her. (No. This is not child abuse when the child actually likes eye contact.) She won. I can't keep up that level of eye contact. But the worried neurologist did verify by EEG that it's not a seizure.
She also was examined by an opthamologist to make sure it wasn't a harbinger of vision difficulties (was she staring as she tried to focus?). She had a vision exam which went far beyond the usual "look at the chart and tell me what you see" exam. The goal was to see if she was staring as a means of trying to bring something into focus. But no. She just stares and makes really intense eye contact.