Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
Background: Research on cooperative behavior and the social brain exists, but
little research has focused on real-time motor cooperative behavior and its neural
correlates. In this proof of concept study, we explored the conceptual notion of
shared and complementary mental models through EEG mapping of two brains
performing a real-world interactive motor task of increasing difficulty. We used the
recently introduced participative “juggling paradigm,” and collected neurophysiological
and psycho-social data. We were interested in analyzing the betweenbrains
coupling during a dyadic juggling task, and in exploring the relationship
between the motor task execution, the jugglers’skill level and the task difficulty. We
also investigated how this relationship could be mirrored in the coupled functional
organization of the interacting brains.
Methods: To capture the neural schemas underlying the notion of shared and
complementary mental models, we examined the functional connectivity
patterns and hyperbrain features of a juggling dyad involved in cooperative motor
tasks of increasing difficulty. Jugglers’ cortical activity was measured using two
synchronized 32-channel EEG systems during dyadic juggling performed with 3,
4, 5 and 6 balls. Individual and hyperbrain functional connections were quantified
through coherence maps calculated across all electrode pairs in the theta and alpha
bands (4–8 and 8–12 Hz). Graph metrics were used to typify the global topology and
efficiency of the functional networks for the four difficulty levels in the theta and
alpha bands.
Results: Results indicated that, as task difficulty increased, the cortical functional
organization of the more skilled juggler became progressively more segregated in
both frequency bands, with a small-world organization in the theta band during
easier tasks, indicative of a flow-like state in line with the neural efficiency
hypothesis. Conversely, more integrated functional patterns were observed for the
less skilled juggler in both frequency bands, possibly related to cognitive overload
due to the difficulty of the task at hand (reinvestment hypothesis). At the hyperbrain level, a segregated functional organization involving areas of the visuo-attentional
networks of both jugglers was observed in both frequency bands and for the easier
task only.
Discussion: These results suggest that cooperative juggling is supported by
integrated activity of specialized cortical areas from both brains only during easier
tasks, whereas it relies on individual skills, mirrored in uncorrelated individual brain
activations, during more difficult tasks. These findings suggest that task difficulty
and jugglers’ personal skills may influence the features of the hyperbrain network
in its shared/integrative and complementary/segregative tendencies.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Complementary mental models; Functional connectivity; Graph theory analysis; Hyperscanning; Juggling paradigm; Shared mental models; Social neuroscience; Team mental models; Neuroscience (all); Medicine (all); Biochemistry; Genetics and Molecular Biology (all); Agricultural and Biological Sciences (all)
Elenco autori:
Filho, Edson; Bertollo, Maurizio; Tamburro, Gabriella; Schinaia, Lorenzo; Chatel Goldman, Jonas; DI FRONSO, Selenia; Robazza, Claudio; Comani, Silvia
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