Buidze Tatia, Sommer Tobias, Zhao Ke, Fu Xiaolan, Gläscher Jan
Institute of Systems Neuroscience, University Medical Center Eppendorf, Hamburg University, Hamburg, Germany.
State Key Laboratory of Brain and Cognitive Science, Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Nat Commun. 2025 Feb 26;16(1):1989. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-57025-z.
Communication, often grounded in shared expectations, faces challenges when a Sender and Receiver lack a common linguistic background. Our study explores how people instinctively turn to the fundamental principles of the physical world to overcome such barriers. Specifically, through an experimental game in which Senders convey messages via trajectories, we investigate how they develop novel strategies without relying on common linguistic cues. We build a computational model based on the principle of expectancy violations and a set of common universal priors derived from movement kinetics. The model replicates participant-designed messages with high accuracy and shows how its core variable-surprise-predicts the Receiver's physiological and neuronal responses in brain areas processing expectation violations. This work highlights the adaptability of human communication, showing how surprise can be a powerful tool in forming new communicative strategies without relying on common language.
交流通常基于共同的期望,但当发送者和接收者缺乏共同的语言背景时,就会面临挑战。我们的研究探讨了人们如何本能地借助物理世界的基本原理来克服此类障碍。具体而言,通过一个实验游戏,即发送者通过轨迹传达信息,我们研究他们如何在不依赖共同语言线索的情况下制定新颖的策略。我们基于预期违背原则和一组从运动动力学得出的常见通用先验构建了一个计算模型。该模型能高精度地复制参与者设计的信息,并展示其核心变量——意外——如何预测大脑中处理预期违背区域的接收者的生理和神经反应。这项工作突出了人类交流的适应性,表明意外如何能成为在不依赖共同语言的情况下形成新交流策略的有力工具。