Publication Date:
Author(s): Caroline Szymanski, Ana Pesquita, Allison A. Brennan, Dionysios Perdikis, James T. Enns, Timothy R. Brick, Viktor Müller, Ulman Lindenberger
Publisher: Academic Press Inc.
Publication Type: Academic Journal Article
Journal Title: NeuroImage
Volume: 152
Page Range: 425-436
Abstract:

Working together feels easier with some people than with others. We asked participants to perform a visual search task either alone or with a partner while simultaneously measuring each participant's EEG. Local phase synchronization and inter-brain phase synchronization were generally higher when subjects jointly attended to a visual search task than when they attended to the same task individually. Some participants searched the visual display more efficiently and made faster decisions when working as a team, whereas other dyads did not benefit from working together. These inter-team differences in behavioral performance gain in the visual search task were reliably associated with inter-team differences in local and inter-brain phase synchronization. Our results suggest that phase synchronization constitutes a neural correlate of social facilitation, and may help to explain why some teams perform better than others.