4.6 Article

Improvised herding: Mapping biobehavioral mechanisms that underlie group efficacy during improvised social interaction

Journal

PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 60, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/psyp.14307

Keywords

coordinated behavior; electrodermal activity; emotional contagion; group efficacy; herding; interpersonal synchrony; musical improvisation; physiological synchrony

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This study used a novel multimodal approach to observe the face-to-face interactions of 51 triads who engaged in spontaneous-free improvisations as a group. The results showed that three hypothesized factors of human herding-physiological synchrony, behavioral coordination, and emotional contagion-predict a sense of group efficacy in its group members.
Improvisation is a natural occurring phenomenon that is central to social interaction. Yet, improvisation is an understudied area in group processes and intergroup relations. Here we build on theory and research about human herding to study the contributions of improvisation on group efficacy and its biobehavioral underpinnings. We employed a novel multimodal approach and integrative method when observing face-to-face interactions-51 triads (total N = 153) drummed together in spontaneous-free improvisations as a group, while their electrodermal activity was monitored simultaneously with their second-by-second rhythmic coordination on a shared electronic drum machine. Our results show that three hypothesized factors of human herding-physiological synchrony, behavioral coordination, and emotional contagion-predict a sense of group efficacy in its group members. These findings are some of the first to show herding at three levels (physiological, behavioral, and mental) in a single study and lay a basis for understanding the role of improvisation in social interaction.

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