Dynamic Time Warping of Physiologic Synchrony Predicts High Stakes Interpersonal Trust
收藏ICPSR2025-01-01 更新2026-04-16 收录
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We trust strangers every day. Deciding to trust another depends on the social and legal environments that influence calculative trust as well as unconsciously processed neural signals. Moreover, unenforceable communication ("cheap talk") has been shown to increase cooperative behaviors. Herein we test whether neurophysiologic synchrony during pre-decision communication explains why one would trust a stranger when the money at risk is meaningful. Working-age adults discussed how to share $480 before making sequential decisions in private. The social interaction was structured so that the first decision-maker had to sacrifice money s/he controlled by sending it to the second decision-maker in order to grow the money at stake. High-frequency neurophysiology was captured during communication and two measures of neural synchrony, intersubject correlation and dynamic time warping, were evaluated for their predictive accuracy. We found that the dynamic time warping of synchrony predicted trust with a stranger with 60% accuracy, a 15% improvement over the accuracy using the intersubject correlation measure of synchrony. Our findings demonstrate that dynamic time warping is a more effective measure of neurophysiologic synchrony, leading to new insights into how communication about how to share a meaningful amount of money influences the decision to trust a stranger.
提供机构:
Claremont Graduate University
创建时间:
2025-01-01



