Department of Psychology, Neuroscience, and Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1.
McMaster Institute for Music and the Mind, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada L8S 4K1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2017 May 23;114(21):E4134-E4141. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1617657114. Epub 2017 May 8.
The cultural and technological achievements of the human species depend on complex social interactions. Nonverbal interpersonal coordination, or joint action, is a crucial element of social interaction, but the dynamics of nonverbal information flow among people are not well understood. We used joint music making in string quartets, a complex, naturalistic nonverbal behavior, as a model system. Using motion capture, we recorded body sway simultaneously in four musicians, which reflected real-time interpersonal information sharing. We used Granger causality to analyze predictive relationships among the motion time series of the players to determine the magnitude and direction of information flow among the players. We experimentally manipulated which musician was the leader (followers were not informed who was leading) and whether they could see each other, to investigate how these variables affect information flow. We found that assigned leaders exerted significantly greater influence on others and were less influenced by others compared with followers. This effect was present, whether or not they could see each other, but was enhanced with visual information, indicating that visual as well as auditory information is used in musical coordination. Importantly, performers' ratings of the "goodness" of their performances were positively correlated with the overall degree of body sway coupling, indicating that communication through body sway reflects perceived performance success. These results confirm that information sharing in a nonverbal joint action task occurs through both auditory and visual cues and that the dynamics of information flow are affected by changing group relationships.
人类的文化和技术成就取决于复杂的社会互动。非言语人际协调或联合行动是非言语社会互动的一个关键要素,但人们之间的非言语信息流的动态尚未得到很好的理解。我们使用弦乐四重奏中的联合音乐创作作为模型系统,这是一种复杂的、自然的非言语行为。我们使用运动捕捉技术同时记录了四名音乐家的身体摆动,这反映了实时的人际信息共享。我们使用格兰杰因果关系来分析参与者运动时间序列之间的预测关系,以确定参与者之间信息流的大小和方向。我们通过实验操纵哪个音乐家是领导者(追随者不知道谁是领导者)以及他们是否可以相互看到,以调查这些变量如何影响信息流。我们发现,与追随者相比,指定的领导者对其他人的影响更大,而受到其他人的影响更小。无论他们是否能看到对方,这种影响都存在,但随着视觉信息的增强而增强,这表明视觉和听觉信息都被用于音乐协调。重要的是,表演者对其表演的“好坏”的评价与身体摆动耦合的整体程度呈正相关,这表明通过身体摆动进行的交流反映了对表演成功的感知。这些结果证实,在非言语联合动作任务中,信息共享是通过听觉和视觉线索进行的,并且信息流的动态受不断变化的群体关系的影响。