 We don't realize how effective it still is virtually, so we do it wrong. It's fascinating how easily we pick up on others body language, which also brings me to this point that you mentioned about, we're going to mimic the micro expressions that are going on. We see those when we're dealing with people, but this is something that we're now learning that we have all this technology, and I can't read the micro expressions on your face through the technology. And so these interactions are almost surface level. Yeah, I'm talking with my mom via chat across the country, but it's not like I'm sitting with her nature takes over and we're mimicking each other to understand and have an empathy that is face to face level. I move away from micro expressions as it's not really an area that I place myself in. And I look more at what we can observe and think that we can see and assess for. But virtually what I have found is it doesn't actually affect how much you can create trust. We can create trust or cooperation exactly the same virtually. It's just people aren't used to it because our brains have not had to deal with it. So it's all very new and we don't really know how to respond. So we act in a really unnatural way. So when you usually have a conversation with someone, unless it's at a restaurant, typically you're more to the side. If I stood straight on with every conversation, it is quite intimidating. But yet we do that online. And again, that is picked up as a bit of a threat. And we typically stay really rigid as well. We don't move so much. And what people tend to do online is they don't have much of their upper body showing. If you are in a really dark room or have a really bad camera or the camera is at a really weird angle, I can't see your face expression clear enough to respond to them. So it's not that we can't. It's that we don't realize how effective it still is virtually. So we do it wrong. Or one thing that we see a lot that is really bad for trustworthiness is the filters that people put on their cameras takes our attention away from what they're saying. So it's distracting and it's confusing for our brains to have this kind of interaction with these things in the background.