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Attention allocation and task representation during joint action planning.

Dimitrios Kourtis1, Günther Knoblich, Mateusz Woźniak

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Planning synchronous joint actions involves sharing attention and anticipating a partner's actions. Early planning divides focus, while later stages represent the partner's actions, aiding coordinated movement.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Social Psychology
  • Human-Computer Interaction

Background:

  • Synchronous joint actions require complex coordination between individuals.
  • Understanding the cognitive processes underlying joint action planning is crucial for human interaction research.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate how individuals consider a partner's attentional focus during joint action planning.
  • To determine if individuals mentally represent their partner's task components in advance.
  • To explore the electrophysiological correlates of attention sharing and predictive representation in joint actions.

Main Methods:

  • A choice reaction paradigm with joint, unimanual, and bimanual individual actions.
  • Electroencephalography (EEG) recording from one participant.
  • Analysis of lateralized EEG components (anterior directing attention negativity, late directing attention positivity) and action planning potentials (late contingent negative variation, movement-related potential).

Main Results:

  • Early joint action planning involves dividing attention between self- and partner-relevant spatial locations.
  • Later planning stages show participants representing their partner's actions, though not effector-specifically.
  • Electrophysiological data support attention sharing and predictive self/other action representation.

Conclusions:

  • Joint action planning dynamically allocates attention and involves predictive modeling of a partner's actions.
  • These cognitive processes are essential for successful synchronous collaborative tasks.
  • Electrophysiological measures provide insights into the neural basis of shared intentionality.