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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Body sway reflects leadership in joint music performance

TLDR
It is demonstrated that musician assigned as leaders affect other performers more than musicians assigned as followers, and information sharing in a nonverbal joint action task occurs through both auditory and visual cues.
Abstract
The cultural and technological achievements of the human species depend on complex social interactions. Nonverbal interpersonal coordination, or joint action, is a crucial element of social interaction, but the dynamics of nonverbal information flow among people are not well understood. We used joint music making in string quartets, a complex, naturalistic nonverbal behavior, as a model system. Using motion capture, we recorded body sway simultaneously in four musicians, which reflected real-time interpersonal information sharing. We used Granger causality to analyze predictive relationships among the motion time series of the players to determine the magnitude and direction of information flow among the players. We experimentally manipulated which musician was the leader (followers were not informed who was leading) and whether they could see each other, to investigate how these variables affect information flow. We found that assigned leaders exerted significantly greater influence on others and were less influenced by others compared with followers. This effect was present, whether or not they could see each other, but was enhanced with visual information, indicating that visual as well as auditory information is used in musical coordination. Importantly, performers' ratings of the "goodness" of their performances were positively correlated with the overall degree of body sway coupling, indicating that communication through body sway reflects perceived performance success. These results confirm that information sharing in a nonverbal joint action task occurs through both auditory and visual cues and that the dynamics of information flow are affected by changing group relationships.

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The Ryerson Audio-Visual Database of Emotional Speech and Song (RAVDESS): A dynamic, multimodal set of facial and vocal expressions in North American English

TL;DR: The RAVDESS is a validated multimodal database of emotional speech and song consisting of 24 professional actors, vocalizing lexically-matched statements in a neutral North American accent, which shows high levels of emotional validity and test-retest intrarater reliability.
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The body talks: Sensorimotor communication and its brain and kinematic signatures

TL;DR: The present work brings together all these separate strands of research within a unified overarching, multidisciplinary framework for SMC, which combines evidence from kinematic studies of human-human interaction and computational modeling of social exchanges.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Live Music Moves Us: Head Movement Differences in Audiences to Live Versus Recorded Music.

TL;DR: It is indicated that live music engages listeners to a greater extent than pre-recorded music and that a pre-existing admiration for the performers also leads to higher engagement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neurobehavioral Interpersonal Synchrony in Early Development: The Role of Interactional Rhythms.

TL;DR: Recent evidence showing that adults provide rhythmical information during early social interactions with their infants, such as affective touch and singing is discussed and it is proposed that entrainment to these social rhythms underlies the formation of interpersonal synchrony and thus stimulates reciprocal interactions between infants and their caregivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Body sway reflects joint emotional expression in music ensemble performance

TL;DR: It is suggested that Granger-coupling of co-actors’ body sways reflects joint emotional expression in a music ensemble, and thus provide a novel approach to studying jointotional expression.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Joint action: bodies and minds moving together

TL;DR: How studies on joint attention, action observation, task sharing, action coordination and agency contribute to the understanding of the cognitive and neural processes supporting joint action are outlined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synchrony and Cooperation

TL;DR: The results suggest that acting in synchrony with others can increase cooperation by strengthening social attachment among group members, and that positive emotions need not be generated for synchrony to foster cooperation.
Book ChapterDOI

The psychology of music

TL;DR: In this paper, Deutsch et al. describe the processing of pitch combinations in music and present a method for detecting pitch combinations with the help of a neural network, which can be used to detect pitch combinations.
Journal ArticleDOI

It's all in the timing: Interpersonal synchrony increases affiliation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of interpersonal synchrony on affiliation by having participants match finger movements with a visual moving metronome and found that the degree of synchrony predicted subsequent affiliation ratings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensorimotor synchronization: A review of recent research (2006–2012)

TL;DR: It is evident that much new knowledge about SMS has been acquired in the last 7 years, and more recent research in what appears to be a burgeoning field is surveyed.
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