Publisher DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.00234
Title: Subjective evaluation of performance in a collaborative task is better predicted from autonomic response than from true achievements
Language: English
Authors: Maye, Alexander 
Lorenz, Jürgen 
Stoica, Mircea 
Engel, Andreas K. 
Editor: Pilly, Praveen K. 
Keywords: biophysical methods; embodied cognition; human behavior; joint attention; self-perception
Issue Date: 17-Jul-2020
Publisher: Frontiers
Journal or Series Name: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 
Volume: 14
Abstract: 
Whereas the fundamental role of the body in social cognition seems to be generally accepted, elucidating the bodily mechanisms associated with non-verbal communication and cooperation between two or more persons is still a challenging endeavor. In this article we propose a fresh approach for investigating the function of the autonomic nervous system that is reflected in parameters of heart rate variability, respiration, and electrodermal activity in a social setting. We analyzed autonomic parameters of dyads solving a target-tracking task together with the partner or individually. A machine classifier was trained to predict the subjects' rating of performance and collaboration either from tracking error data or from the set of autonomic parameters. When subjects collaborated, this classifier could predict the subjective performance ratings better from the autonomic response than from the objective performance of the subjects. However, when they solved the task individually, predictability from autonomic parameters dropped to the level of objective performance, indicating that subjects were more rational in rating their performance in this condition. Moreover, the model captured general knowledge about the population that allows it to predict the performance ratings of an unseen subject significantly better than chance. Our results suggest that, in particular in situations that require collaboration with others, evaluation of performance is shaped by the bodily processes that are quantified by autonomic parameters. Therefore, subjective performance assessments appear to be modulated not only by the output of a rational or discriminative system that tracks the objective performance but to a significant extent also by interoceptive processes.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12738/14951
ISSN: 1662-5161
Review status: This version was peer reviewed (peer review)
Institute: Fakultät Life Sciences 
Department Medizintechnik 
Type: Article
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