Cultural observation: constant milling about. A couple months ago I was on a video broadcast call for different offices around the world for some employee rah-rah event - people in different locations were literally given pom-poms or towels or, in the case of the Indian location, those streamers on a stick. When each location's turn came, employees would cheer and wave their whatever on cue ("let's hear it from Denver!" "Let's hear it from New York!" Etc) and each location had a leader make some remarks. Cultural differences came out - the Euros were restrained and stayed seated, mostly just clapping. The SoCal office were smirking. The Southerners might as well have been at Bama-Auburn game when called on to make some noise, leaping to their feet and both hands in the air as they hooted and hollered. But generally they were all in their seats until time to cheer, focused on the leaders when they were speaking.
But the Indians? Both during the cheer time and when their or other leaders were speaking, people were just ambling in and out of the room constantly, usually groups of 2 or 3 men in a mini-pack. Half the people were standing, half sitting, the whole time (and randomly - people in the front standing even though people behind them weren't). No spatial or other-awareness at all. Random individuals would swirl their streamers/ ribbons even during their leader's remarks, seemingly just to watch it swirl. On video it was chaos - looked like a a pre-kindergarten classroom or a herd of cats. It was so weird and distracting.
Imagine this in a corporate setting/ meeting:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=qNhPcvqrE3Y