Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.

In daily life, we often copy the gestures and expressions of those we communicate with, but recent evidence shows that such mimicry has a physiological counterpart: interaction elicits linkage, which is a concordance between the biological signals of those involved. To find out how the type of socia...

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Main Authors: Michiel M Spapé, J Matias Kivikangas, Simo Järvelä, Ilkka Kosunen, Giulio Jacucci, Niklas Ravaja
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3835884?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-0b19dd77827a4956b87e5c74941441c32020-11-25T01:27:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-01811e7879510.1371/journal.pone.0078795Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.Michiel M SpapéJ Matias KivikangasSimo JärveläIlkka KosunenGiulio JacucciNiklas RavajaIn daily life, we often copy the gestures and expressions of those we communicate with, but recent evidence shows that such mimicry has a physiological counterpart: interaction elicits linkage, which is a concordance between the biological signals of those involved. To find out how the type of social interaction affects linkage, pairs of participants played a turn-based computer game in which the level of competition was systematically varied between cooperation and competition. Linkage in the beta and gamma frequency bands was observed in the EEG, especially when the participants played directly against each other. Emotional expression, measured using facial EMG, reflected this pattern, with the most competitive condition showing enhanced linkage over the facial muscle-regions involved in smiling. These effects were found to be related to self-reported social presence: linkage in positive emotional expression was associated with self-reported shared negative feelings. The observed effects confirmed the hypothesis that the social context affected the degree to which participants had similar reactions to their environment and consequently showed similar patterns of brain activity. We discuss the functional resemblance between linkage, as an indicator of a shared physiology and affect, and the well-known mirror neuron system, and how they relate to social functions like empathy.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3835884?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michiel M Spapé
J Matias Kivikangas
Simo Järvelä
Ilkka Kosunen
Giulio Jacucci
Niklas Ravaja
spellingShingle Michiel M Spapé
J Matias Kivikangas
Simo Järvelä
Ilkka Kosunen
Giulio Jacucci
Niklas Ravaja
Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michiel M Spapé
J Matias Kivikangas
Simo Järvelä
Ilkka Kosunen
Giulio Jacucci
Niklas Ravaja
author_sort Michiel M Spapé
title Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
title_short Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
title_full Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
title_fullStr Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
title_full_unstemmed Keep your opponents close: social context affects EEG and fEMG linkage in a turn-based computer game.
title_sort keep your opponents close: social context affects eeg and femg linkage in a turn-based computer game.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description In daily life, we often copy the gestures and expressions of those we communicate with, but recent evidence shows that such mimicry has a physiological counterpart: interaction elicits linkage, which is a concordance between the biological signals of those involved. To find out how the type of social interaction affects linkage, pairs of participants played a turn-based computer game in which the level of competition was systematically varied between cooperation and competition. Linkage in the beta and gamma frequency bands was observed in the EEG, especially when the participants played directly against each other. Emotional expression, measured using facial EMG, reflected this pattern, with the most competitive condition showing enhanced linkage over the facial muscle-regions involved in smiling. These effects were found to be related to self-reported social presence: linkage in positive emotional expression was associated with self-reported shared negative feelings. The observed effects confirmed the hypothesis that the social context affected the degree to which participants had similar reactions to their environment and consequently showed similar patterns of brain activity. We discuss the functional resemblance between linkage, as an indicator of a shared physiology and affect, and the well-known mirror neuron system, and how they relate to social functions like empathy.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3835884?pdf=render
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