| Literature DB >> 26333815 |
Matteo Candidi1, Arianna Curioni2, Francesco Donnarumma3, Lucia Maria Sacheli2, Giovanni Pezzulo4.
Abstract
Non-verbal communication is the basis of animal interactions. In dyadic leader-follower interactions, leaders master the ability to carve their motor behaviour in order to 'signal' their future actions and internal plans while these signals influence the behaviour of follower partners, who automatically tend to imitate the leader even in complementary interactions. Despite their usefulness, signalling and imitation have a biomechanical cost, and it is unclear how this cost-benefits trade-off is managed during repetitive dyadic interactions that present learnable regularities. We studied signalling and imitation dynamics (indexed by movement kinematics) in pairs of leaders and followers during a repetitive, rule-based, joint action. Trial-by-trial Bayesian model comparison was used to evaluate the relation between signalling, imitation and pair performance. The different models incorporate different hypotheses concerning the factors (past interactions versus online movements) influencing the leader's signalling (or follower's imitation) kinematics. This approach showed that (i) leaders' signalling strategy improves future couple performance, (ii) leaders used the history of past interactions to shape their signalling, (iii) followers' imitative behaviour is more strongly affected by the online movement of the leader. This study elucidates the ways online sensorimotor communication help individuals align their task representations and ultimately improves joint action performance.Keywords: model comparison; motor interactions; sensorimotor communication
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26333815 PMCID: PMC4614476 DOI: 10.1098/rsif.2015.0644
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J R Soc Interface ISSN: 1742-5662 Impact factor: 4.118