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The acquisition of socio-motor improvisation in the mirror game
Affiliation:1. MARCS Institute for Brain, Behaviour & Development and School of Social Sciences & Psychology, Western Sydney University, Australia;2. Swinburne University of Technology, Australia;3. Deakin University, Australia;4. Coventry University, United Kingdom;5. Queensland University of Technology, Australia;6. Australian Dance Theatre, Australia
Abstract:Socio-motor improvisation is defined as the creative action of two or more people without a script or anticipated preparation. It is evaluated through two main parameters: movement synchronization and movement richness. Experts in art (e.g., dance, theater or music) are known to exhibit higher synchronization and to perform richer movements during interpersonal improvisation, but how these competences evolve over time is largely unknown. In the present study, we investigated whether performing more synchronized and richer movements over time can promote the acquisition of improvisation. Pairs of novice participants were instructed to play an improvisation mirror game in three different sessions. Between sessions, they performed an unintended interpersonal coordination task in which synchronization and richness were manipulated, resulting in four different groups of dyads. Our results demonstrate that synchronization during improvisation improved for all groups whereas movement richness only enhanced for dyads that performed synchronized movements during unintended coordination tasks. Our findings suggest that movement synchrony contributes more than movement richness to the acquisition of socio-motor improvisation in the mirror game.
Keywords:Interpersonal coordination  Social interaction  Motor improvisation  Joint action  Synchronization  Movement richness
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