4.4 Article

Zoom Disrupts the Rhythm of Conversation

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-GENERAL
Volume 151, Issue 6, Pages 1272-1282

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/xge0001150

Keywords

conversation; turn-taking; dynamical systems; oscillator; video conferencing

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Small, variable transmission delays over Zoom disrupt the typical rhythm of conversation, leading to delays in turn initiation. Remote responses over Zoom have significantly longer latency compared to local responses, suggesting disruption of automated mechanisms guiding turn initiation timing. The electronic transmission delays may disrupt neural oscillators that normally synchronize on syllable rate, affecting the ability of interlocutors to precisely time the initiation of their turns.
Small, variable transmission delays over Zoom disrupt the typical rhythm of conversation, leading to delays in turn initiation. This study compared local and remote (Zoom) turn transition times using both a tightly controlled yes/no Question and Answer (Q&A) paradigm (Corps et al., 2018) and unscripted conversation. In the Q&A paradigm (Experiment 1), participants responded yes/no as quickly as possible to prerecorded questions. Half of the questions were played over Zoom and half were played locally from their own computer. Local responses had an average latency of 297 ms, whereas remote responses averaged 976 ms. These large increases in transition times over Zoom are far greater than the estimated 30-70 ms of audio transmission delay, suggesting disruption of automated mechanisms that normally guide the timing of turn initiation in conversation. In face-to-face conversations (Experiment 2), turn transition times averaged 135 ms, but transition times for the same dyads over Zoom averaged 487 ms. We consider the possibility that electronic transmission delays disrupt neural oscillators that normally synchronize on syllable rate, at around, 150-300 ms per cycle (Wilson & Wilson, 2005), and enable interlocutors to effortlessly and precisely time the initiation of their turns.

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