What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?

Live theater is typically designed to alter the state of mind of the audience. Indeed, the perceptual inputs issuing from a live theatrical performance are intended to represent something else, and the actions, emphasised by the writing and staging, are the key prompting the adhesion of viewers to f...

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Main Authors: Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz, Yannick Bressan, Nathalie Heider, Hélène Otzenberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2010-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00059/full
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spelling doaj-286fa419d7ea44ad8cf3139543e734502020-11-25T02:49:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Human Neuroscience1662-51612010-08-01410.3389/fnhum.2010.000591697What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz0Yannick Bressan1Nathalie Heider2Hélène Otzenberger3CNRS/University of Strasbourg FRE3289Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La DéfenseCNRS/University of Strasbourg FRE3289CNRS/University of Strasbourg FRE3289Live theater is typically designed to alter the state of mind of the audience. Indeed, the perceptual inputs issuing from a live theatrical performance are intended to represent something else, and the actions, emphasised by the writing and staging, are the key prompting the adhesion of viewers to fiction, i.e. their belief that it is real. This phenomenon raises the issue of the cognitive processes governing access to a fictional reality during live theater and of their cerebral underpinnings. To get insight into the physiological substrates of adhesion we recreated the peculiar context of watching live drama in a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment, with simultaneous recording of heart activity. The instants of adhesion were defined as the co-occurrence of theatrical events determined a priori by the stage director and the spectators’ offline reports of moments when fiction acted as reality. These data served to specify, for each spectator, individual fMRI time-series, used in a random-effect group analysis to define the pattern of brain response to theatrical events. The changes in this pattern related to subjects’ adhesion to fiction, were investigated using a region of interest analysis. The results showed that adhesion to theatrical events correlated with increased activity in the left BA47 and pSTS, together with a decrease in dynamic heart rate variability, leading us to discuss the hypothesis of subtle changes in the subjects’ state of awareness, enabling them to mentally dissociate physical and mental (drama-viewing) experiences, to account for the phenomenon of adhesion to dramatic fiction.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00059/fullfMRItheatreHuman communicationdynamic HRVfictionnarrative processing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz
Yannick Bressan
Nathalie Heider
Hélène Otzenberger
spellingShingle Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz
Yannick Bressan
Nathalie Heider
Hélène Otzenberger
What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
fMRI
theatre
Human communication
dynamic HRV
fiction
narrative processing
author_facet Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz
Yannick Bressan
Nathalie Heider
Hélène Otzenberger
author_sort Marie-Noëlle Metz-Lutz
title What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
title_short What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
title_full What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
title_fullStr What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
title_full_unstemmed What physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
title_sort what physiological changes and cerebral traces tell us about adhesion to fiction during theater-watching?
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Human Neuroscience
issn 1662-5161
publishDate 2010-08-01
description Live theater is typically designed to alter the state of mind of the audience. Indeed, the perceptual inputs issuing from a live theatrical performance are intended to represent something else, and the actions, emphasised by the writing and staging, are the key prompting the adhesion of viewers to fiction, i.e. their belief that it is real. This phenomenon raises the issue of the cognitive processes governing access to a fictional reality during live theater and of their cerebral underpinnings. To get insight into the physiological substrates of adhesion we recreated the peculiar context of watching live drama in a functional magnetic resonance imaging experiment, with simultaneous recording of heart activity. The instants of adhesion were defined as the co-occurrence of theatrical events determined a priori by the stage director and the spectators’ offline reports of moments when fiction acted as reality. These data served to specify, for each spectator, individual fMRI time-series, used in a random-effect group analysis to define the pattern of brain response to theatrical events. The changes in this pattern related to subjects’ adhesion to fiction, were investigated using a region of interest analysis. The results showed that adhesion to theatrical events correlated with increased activity in the left BA47 and pSTS, together with a decrease in dynamic heart rate variability, leading us to discuss the hypothesis of subtle changes in the subjects’ state of awareness, enabling them to mentally dissociate physical and mental (drama-viewing) experiences, to account for the phenomenon of adhesion to dramatic fiction.
topic fMRI
theatre
Human communication
dynamic HRV
fiction
narrative processing
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00059/full
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