Great minds think alike: Collaborating brains process information the same way

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Australian researchers say, when doing a shared task, our brains will process information the same way as our teammates, even if we aren't looking at one another. To work this out, the authors had 24 pairs of people categorising shapes and patterns, and asked them to organise ahead of time how they were going to do so - by sorting them into wavy or straight lines, thick or thin ones, contrast or their general shape. They then sat the pairs back-to-back and measured their brain activity while the participants were sorting. For a very brief blip, everyone in the study had the same brain activity after a shape appeared, but a bit further into the trial, the team noticed only the pairs were having matching brainwaves.

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From: PLOS

Collaborating minds think alike, processing information in similar ways in a shared task

When sharing a task, two people’s brains process information in the same way—even while back to back

Whether great minds think alike is up for debate, but the collaborating minds of two people working on a shared task process information alike, according to a study published November 25th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Denise Moerel and colleagues from Western Sydney University in Australia.

Humans rely on collaboration for everything from raising food to raising children. But to cooperate successfully, people need to make sure that they are seeing the same things and working within the same rules. We must agree that the red fruits are the ones that are ripe and that we will leave green fruits alone. Behavioral collaboration requires that people think in the same way and follow the same instructions. To better understand people’s cognitive processes during a shared task, the authors of this study collected data from 24 pairs of people. Each pair had to categorize shapes and patterns and got to decide ahead of time how they would do so—sorting by wavy or straight lines, thick or thin ones, contrast or general shape. Then each pair sat back-to-back and worked together to categorize one shape after another, while electroencephalograms recorded their brain activity to find out how well that activity aligned between pairs.

In the first 45-180 milliseconds after a shape appeared, everyone in the study had similar neural activity, a result of looking at the same pattern on the screen. But after 200 milliseconds, as each pair worked to sort the pattern according to their own rules, activity lined up only in pairs that were actively working together. The brains of each pair were processing information in similar ways, and the alignment of their activity increased over the course of the experiment as the pairs got better at working as a team, following the rules they’d laid out together. The results show that when people agree upon rules and work together, their brains process information in similar ways. The authors suggest this shared activity could have important implications for how groups make decisions and develop traditions and rituals.

The authors add, “As two people learn to work together, their brains start to represent information in a more similar way, showing that collaboration influences how we see and understand the world.”

Journal/
conference:
PLOS Biology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Western Sydney University
Funder: This work was supported by an Australian Research Council (ARC, www.arc.gov.au) Discovery Project awarded to M.V. (DP220103047) and an ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award awarded to T.G. (DE230100380). D.M. received salary from DP220103047 and T.G. received salary from DE230100380.
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