Published March 17, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Interpersonal synchronization of spontaneously generated body movements

  • 1. Neuroscience of Perception and Action Lab, Italian Institute of Technology (IIT)
  • 2. Neuroscience and Behaviour Lab, Italian Institute of Technology (IIT)

Description

Interpersonal movement synchrony (IMS) is central to social behavior in several species. In humans, IMS is typically studied using structured tasks requiring participants to produce specific body movements. Instead, spontaneously generated (i.e., not instructed) movements have received less attention. To test whether spontaneous movements synchronize interpersonally, we recorded full-body kinematics from dyads of participants who were only asked to sit face-to-face and to look at each other. We manipulated interpersonal (i) visual contact and (ii) spatial proximity. We found that spontaneous movements synchronized across participants only when they could see each other and regardless of interpersonal spatial proximity. This synchronization emerged very rapidly and did not selectively entail homologous body parts (as in mimicry); rather, the synchrony generalized to nearly all possible combinations of body parts. Hence, spontaneous behavior alone can lead to IMS. More generally, our results highlight that IMS can be studied under natural and unconstrained conditions.

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Interpersonal synchronization of spontaneously generated body movements.pdf

Additional details

Related works

Is supplemented by
Dataset: 10.48557/4K3WZI (DOI)

Funding

PAINSTRAT – Novel neurophysiological techniques to quantify pain and stratify patients 649020
European Commission
MUSICOM – Sensorimotor Foundations of Communicative Musicality 948186
European Commission