Somatosensory driven interpersonal synchrony during rhythmic sway
Identifieur interne : 000310 ( PascalFrancis/Corpus ); précédent : 000309; suivant : 000311Somatosensory driven interpersonal synchrony during rhythmic sway
Auteurs : George Sofianidis ; Vassilia Hatzitaki ; George Grouios ; Leif Johannsen ; Alan WingSource :
- Human movement science [ 0167-9457 ] ; 2012.
Descripteurs français
- Pascal (Inist)
English descriptors
- KwdEn :
Abstract
Spontaneous synchrony emerges between individuals performing together rhythmic activities while communicating by means of sensory feedback. In this study, we examined the nature of interpersonal synchrony mediated by light fingertip contact when individuals sway rhythmically in the sagittal plane. The effect of traditional dance expertise on interpersonal synchrony was investigated. Sixty participants (30 dancers, 30 novices) formed three types of couples (10 expert couples, 10 novice couples, 10 mixed couples) and performed a rhythmical sway task (40 s) that was either self or metronome paced (frequency: 0.25 Hz). Cross spectral analysis of the center of pressure (CoP) displacement signals revealed that during self-paced sway fingertip contact evoked a decrease of the dominant sway frequency difference between partners, an increase in the coherence between the sway signals and a concentration of relative phase angles towards the in-phase (0°-20°) region. In metronome paced sway however, only expert dancers were able to benefit from haptic contact to further improve interpersonal synchrony. These findings suggest that haptic contact can stabilize the spontaneous coordination dynamics of two persons performing rhythmic sway together. The strength of the emerged synchrony depends on the individuals' expertise to integrate tactile and auditory information about sway.
Notice en format standard (ISO 2709)
Pour connaître la documentation sur le format Inist Standard.
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Format Inist (serveur)
NO : | PASCAL 12-0321510 INIST |
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ET : | Somatosensory driven interpersonal synchrony during rhythmic sway |
AU : | SOFIANIDIS (George); HATZITAKI (Vassilia); GROUIOS (George); JOHANNSEN (Leif); WING (Alan) |
AF : | Laboratory of Motor Control and Learning, Department of Physical Education and Sport Sciences, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki/Thessaloniki 541 24/Grèce (1 aut., 2 aut., 3 aut.); Behavioural Brain Sciences Centre, School of Psychology, University of Birmingham/Birmingham/Royaume-Uni (4 aut., 5 aut.); Movement Science, Department for Sport and Health Sciences, Technische Universität München/Munich/Allemagne (4 aut.) |
DT : | Publication en série; Niveau analytique |
SO : | Human movement science; ISSN 0167-9457; Coden HMSCDO; Pays-Bas; Da. 2012; Vol. 31; No. 3; Pp. 553-566; Bibl. 1/2 p. |
LA : | Anglais |
EA : | Spontaneous synchrony emerges between individuals performing together rhythmic activities while communicating by means of sensory feedback. In this study, we examined the nature of interpersonal synchrony mediated by light fingertip contact when individuals sway rhythmically in the sagittal plane. The effect of traditional dance expertise on interpersonal synchrony was investigated. Sixty participants (30 dancers, 30 novices) formed three types of couples (10 expert couples, 10 novice couples, 10 mixed couples) and performed a rhythmical sway task (40 s) that was either self or metronome paced (frequency: 0.25 Hz). Cross spectral analysis of the center of pressure (CoP) displacement signals revealed that during self-paced sway fingertip contact evoked a decrease of the dominant sway frequency difference between partners, an increase in the coherence between the sway signals and a concentration of relative phase angles towards the in-phase (0°-20°) region. In metronome paced sway however, only expert dancers were able to benefit from haptic contact to further improve interpersonal synchrony. These findings suggest that haptic contact can stabilize the spontaneous coordination dynamics of two persons performing rhythmic sway together. The strength of the emerged synchrony depends on the individuals' expertise to integrate tactile and auditory information about sway. |
CC : | 002A24 |
FD : | Coordination; Expertise; Danse; Homme; Mouvement rythmique; Synchronisation; Etude mouvement; Mouvement corporel; Boucle réaction; Analyse sensorielle |
ED : | Coordination; Expertise; Dance; Human; Rhythmic movement; Synchronization; Motion study; Body movement; Feedback; Sensory analysis |
SD : | Coordinación; Peritaje; Danza; Hombre; Movimiento rítmico; Sincronización; Estudio movimiento; Movimiento corporal; Retroalimentación; Análisis sensorial |
LO : | INIST-19996.354000508319250060 |
ID : | 12-0321510 |
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Pascal:12-0321510Le document en format XML
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