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Effect- and Performance-Based Auditory Feedback on Interpersonal Coordination.


ABSTRACT: When two individuals interact in a collaborative task, such as carrying a sofa or a table, usually spatiotemporal coordination of individual motor behavior will emerge. In many cases, interpersonal coordination can arise independently of verbal communication, based on the observation of the partners' movements and/or the object's movements. In this study, we investigate how social coupling between two individuals can emerge in a collaborative task under different modes of perceptual information. A visual reference condition was compared with three different conditions with new types of additional auditory feedback provided in real time: effect-based auditory feedback, performance-based auditory feedback, and combined effect/performance-based auditory feedback. We have developed a new paradigm in which the actions of both participants continuously result in a seamlessly merged effect on an object simulated by a tablet computer application. Here, participants should temporally synchronize their movements with a 90° phase difference and precisely adjust the finger dynamics in order to keep the object (a ball) accurately rotating on a given circular trajectory on the tablet. Results demonstrate that interpersonal coordination in a joint task can be altered by different kinds of additional auditory information in various ways.

SUBMITTER: Hwang TH 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC5885253 | biostudies-literature | 2018

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Effect- and Performance-Based Auditory Feedback on Interpersonal Coordination.

Hwang Tong-Hun TH   Schmitz Gerd G   Klemmt Kevin K   Brinkop Lukas L   Ghai Shashank S   Stoica Mircea M   Maye Alexander A   Blume Holger H   Effenberg Alfred O AO  

Frontiers in psychology 20180329


When two individuals interact in a collaborative task, such as carrying a sofa or a table, usually spatiotemporal coordination of individual motor behavior will emerge. In many cases, interpersonal coordination can arise independently of verbal communication, based on the observation of the partners' movements and/or the object's movements. In this study, we investigate how social coupling between two individuals can emerge in a collaborative task under different modes of perceptual information.  ...[more]

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