Pseudo‐mutual gazing enhances interbrain synchrony during remote joint attention tasking

Author:

Chuang Chun‐Hsiang12,Hsu Hao‐Che134

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Education and Mind Sciences, College of Education National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu Taiwan

2. Institute of Information Systems and Applications College of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu Taiwan

3. Department of Computer Science National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University Hsinchu Taiwan

4. Department of Computer Science and Engineering National Taiwan Ocean University Keelung Taiwan

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionMutual gaze enables people to share attention and increase engagement during social interactions through intentional and implicit messages. Although previous studies have explored gaze behaviors and neural mechanisms underlying in‐person eye contact, the growing prevalence of remote communication has raised questions about how to establish mutual gaze remotely and how the brains of interacting individuals synchronize.MethodsTo address these questions, we conducted a study using eye trackers to create a pseudo‐mutual gaze channel that mirrors the gazes of each interacting dyad on their respective remote screens. To demonstrate fluctuations in coupling across brains, we incorporated electroencephalographic hyperscanning techniques to simultaneously record the brain activity of interacting dyads engaged in a joint attention task in player‐observer, collaborative, and competitive modes.ResultsOur results indicated that mutual gaze could improve the efficiency of joint attention activities among remote partners. Moreover, by employing the phase locking value, we could estimate interbrain synchrony (IBS) and observe low‐frequency couplings in the frontal and temporal regions that varied based on the interaction mode. While dyadic gender composition significantly affected gaze patterns, it did not impact the IBS.ConclusionThese results provide insight into the neurological mechanisms underlying remote interaction through the pseudo‐mutual gaze channel and have significant implications for developing effective online communication environments.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience

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