Modulation of Inter- and Intra-brain Connectivity due to Social Presence
and Task Difficulty: A dual EEG/fNIRS Hyperscanning Study
- Kerem Usal,
- Murat Perit Çakır
Abstract
This study employed fNIRS- and EEG-hyperscanning to investigate the
effects of task sharing, social presence, and mental workload on intra-
and inter-brain functional connectivity, and neurophysiological
responses of dyads during a dual n-back task. The findings indicated a
positive correlation between the n-back level and reaction times, heart
rate, and PFC oxygenation, whereas task accuracy and heart rate
variability decreased with difficulty. The effect of social presence was
smaller than the effect of task difficulty, suggesting a lower level of
mental workload during the social condition, possibly due to social
facilitation. In the social condition, inter-brain connectivity tended
to decrease as task difficulty increased, indicating that partners could
monitor each other's actions to the extent that task demands allowed.
The intra-brain connectivity analysis showed a larger difference between
individual and social sessions compared to the difference between own
and co-actor's go trials in the social session. Overall, the EEG- and
fNIRS-hyperscanning measures obtained during a dual n-back task in this
study provide evidence regarding the differential modulation of inter-
and intra-brain functional connectivity due to the co-presence of
another actor responding to the same stimulus to pursue a different goal
and changes in task difficulty.30 Jul 2024Submitted to European Journal of Neuroscience 16 Aug 2024Submission Checks Completed
16 Aug 2024Assigned to Editor
25 Aug 2024Review(s) Completed, Editorial Evaluation Pending
26 Aug 2024Reviewer(s) Assigned