Feeling 'in the zone' with your team? Your brains might be in sync

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC

Are you and your teammates ‘in the zone’? That could mean your brain is synchronised with your teammates, according to Aussie and international researchers. The researchers measured brain activity of teams of two while they played a music video game together. The teams were separated for some trials, which prevented good teamwork. In other trials, the music was scrambled, which encouraged teamwork. After each game, participants were asked about their level of ‘flow’, and researchers compared this to measured brain activity. They found brain activity was more synchronised at times when participants reported being ‘in the zone’, compared to a state of regular team work.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

The Unique Brain State of Team Flow

The neural signature may be a tool to predict and enhance team performance

The experience of team flow, when a group gets “in the zone” to accomplish a task together, has its own unique brain state, distinct from that of teamwork or solo flow, according to new research published in eNeuro.

Shehata et al. used EEG to measure the brain activity of teams of two while they played a music video game together. In some trials, a partition separated the teammates so they couldn’t see each other while they played, allowing a solo flow state but preventing team flow. In other trials, the research team scrambled the music, which prevented a flow state but still allowed teamwork. Participants answered questions after each game to assess their level of flow. The researchers compared the brain activity of the participants during each condition. They found a unique signature of team flow: increased beta and gamma brain waves in the middle temporal cortex, a type of brain activity linked to information processing. Teammates also had more synchronized brain activity during the team flow state compared to the regular teamwork state. In future work, the researchers plan to utilize the neural signature of team flow to monitor and enhance team performance and, perhaps, build more effective teams.

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conference:
eNeuro
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Monash University
Funder: This work is supported by the program for promoting the enhancement of research universities funded to Toyohashi University of Technology to M.S. and S.N.; and the Japan Science and Technology (JST)-CREST Grant Number JPMJCR14E4 to S.S. M.C. is supported by the University of Hong Kong postgraduate scholarship program. C.T. is supported by the University of Hong Kong General Research Fund. N.T. is supported by Australian Research Council Discovery Projects (DP180104128 and DP180100396). A.L. is supported by an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship.
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