Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.

Physical interaction with a partner plays an essential role in our life experience and is the basis of many daily activities. When two physically coupled humans have different and partly conflicting goals, they face the challenge of negotiating some type of collaboration. This requires that both par...

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Main Authors: Vinil T Chackochan, Vittorio Sanguineti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-12-01
Series:PLoS Computational Biology
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006385
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spelling doaj-0b6e25c48fe742188871cb8fc18d133a2021-04-21T15:12:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Computational Biology1553-734X1553-73582019-12-011512e100638510.1371/journal.pcbi.1006385Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.Vinil T ChackochanVittorio SanguinetiPhysical interaction with a partner plays an essential role in our life experience and is the basis of many daily activities. When two physically coupled humans have different and partly conflicting goals, they face the challenge of negotiating some type of collaboration. This requires that both participants understand their partner's state and current actions. But, how would the collaboration be affected if information about their partner were unreliable or incomplete? We designed an experiment in which two players (a dyad) are mechanically connected through a virtual spring, but cannot see each other. They were instructed to perform reaching movements with the same start and end position, but through different via-points. In different groups of dyads we varied the amount of information provided to each player about his/her partner: haptic only (the interaction force perceived through the virtual spring), visuo-haptic (the interaction force is also displayed on the screen), and partner visible (in addition to interaction force, partner position is continuously displayed on the screen). We found that incomplete information about the partner affects not only the speed at which collaboration is achieved (less information, slower learning), but also the actual collaboration strategy. In particular, incomplete or unreliable information leads to an interaction strategy characterized by alternating leader-follower roles. Conversely, more reliable information leads to more synchronous behaviors, in which no specific roles can be identified. Simulations based on a combination of game theory and Bayesian estimation suggested that synchronous behaviors correspond to optimal interaction (Nash equilibrium). Roles emerge as sub-optimal forms of interaction, which minimize the need to account for the partner. These findings suggest that collaborative strategies in joint action are shaped by the trade-off between the task requirements and the uncertainty of the information available about the partner.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006385
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vinil T Chackochan
Vittorio Sanguineti
spellingShingle Vinil T Chackochan
Vittorio Sanguineti
Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
PLoS Computational Biology
author_facet Vinil T Chackochan
Vittorio Sanguineti
author_sort Vinil T Chackochan
title Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
title_short Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
title_full Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
title_fullStr Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
title_full_unstemmed Incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
title_sort incomplete information about the partner affects the development of collaborative strategies in joint action.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Computational Biology
issn 1553-734X
1553-7358
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Physical interaction with a partner plays an essential role in our life experience and is the basis of many daily activities. When two physically coupled humans have different and partly conflicting goals, they face the challenge of negotiating some type of collaboration. This requires that both participants understand their partner's state and current actions. But, how would the collaboration be affected if information about their partner were unreliable or incomplete? We designed an experiment in which two players (a dyad) are mechanically connected through a virtual spring, but cannot see each other. They were instructed to perform reaching movements with the same start and end position, but through different via-points. In different groups of dyads we varied the amount of information provided to each player about his/her partner: haptic only (the interaction force perceived through the virtual spring), visuo-haptic (the interaction force is also displayed on the screen), and partner visible (in addition to interaction force, partner position is continuously displayed on the screen). We found that incomplete information about the partner affects not only the speed at which collaboration is achieved (less information, slower learning), but also the actual collaboration strategy. In particular, incomplete or unreliable information leads to an interaction strategy characterized by alternating leader-follower roles. Conversely, more reliable information leads to more synchronous behaviors, in which no specific roles can be identified. Simulations based on a combination of game theory and Bayesian estimation suggested that synchronous behaviors correspond to optimal interaction (Nash equilibrium). Roles emerge as sub-optimal forms of interaction, which minimize the need to account for the partner. These findings suggest that collaborative strategies in joint action are shaped by the trade-off between the task requirements and the uncertainty of the information available about the partner.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006385
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