Department of Psychology, University of East London, London, UK.
Department of Psychology, University of East London, London, UK.
Trends Cogn Sci. 2020 Apr;24(4):329-342. doi: 10.1016/j.tics.2020.01.006. Epub 2020 Feb 22.
Currently, we understand much about how children's brains attend to and learn from information presented while they are alone, viewing a screen - but less about how interpersonal social influences are substantiated in the brain. Here, we consider research that examines how social behaviors affect not one, but both partners in a dyad. We review studies that measured interpersonal neural entrainment during early social interaction, considering two ways of measuring entrainment: concurrent entrainment (e.g., 'when A is high, B is high' - also known as synchrony) and sequential entrainment ('changes in A forward-predict changes in B'). We discuss possible causes of interpersonal neural entrainment, and consider whether it is merely an epiphenomenon, or whether it plays an independent, mechanistic role in early attention and learning.
目前,我们对儿童在独处时通过屏幕注意和学习信息的大脑机制有了较多了解,但对人际社交影响如何在大脑中得到证实知之甚少。在这里,我们考虑了研究如何影响不仅仅是一个,而是对二联体中的两个伴侣的社交行为。我们回顾了在早期社会互动期间测量人际神经同步的研究,考虑了两种测量同步的方法:同步(例如,“当 A 高时,B 也高”-也称为同步)和顺序同步(“A 的变化可以预测 B 的变化”)。我们讨论了人际神经同步的可能原因,并考虑了它是否仅仅是一种副现象,或者它是否在早期注意力和学习中发挥独立的机械作用。