Recent accounts of social cognition focus on how we do things together suggesting that becoming aligned relies on a reciprocal exchange of information. The next step is to develop richer computational methods that quantify the degree of coupling and describe the nature of the information exchange. We put forward a definition of coupling comparing it to related terminology and detail available computational methods and the level of organisation to which they pertain, presenting them as a hierarchy from weakest to richest forms of coupling. The rationale is that a temporally coherent link between two dynamical systems at the lowest level of organisation sustains mutual adaptation and alignment at the highest level. Postulating that when we do...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Research on linguistic interaction suggests that two or more individuals can sometimes form adaptive...
Recent accounts of social cognition focus on how we do things together suggesting that becoming alig...
When people observe one another, behavioural alignment can be detected at many levels, from the phys...
People often interact repeatedly: with relatives, through file sharing, in politics, etc. Many such ...
The paper develops a theory of partial similarity and outlines on that basis a new conceptual framew...
The scientific investigation of social interactions presents substantial challenges: interacting age...
Direct and indirect reciprocity are key mechanisms for the evolution of cooperation. Direct reciproc...
International audienceSpontaneous social coordination has been extensively described in natural sett...
Reciprocity is a simple principle for cooperation that explains many of the patterns of how humans s...
Dynamic, naturalistic study of social interactions in humans is a small but growing literature. Emer...
Evolutionary psychologists have proposed two processes that could give rise to the pervasiveness of ...
Reciprocity is a key concept for understanding social behaviour. It involves complex interactions of...
Ranging over a wide array of interactions, coordination comprises the simple to complex interactions...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Research on linguistic interaction suggests that two or more individuals can sometimes form adaptive...
Recent accounts of social cognition focus on how we do things together suggesting that becoming alig...
When people observe one another, behavioural alignment can be detected at many levels, from the phys...
People often interact repeatedly: with relatives, through file sharing, in politics, etc. Many such ...
The paper develops a theory of partial similarity and outlines on that basis a new conceptual framew...
The scientific investigation of social interactions presents substantial challenges: interacting age...
Direct and indirect reciprocity are key mechanisms for the evolution of cooperation. Direct reciproc...
International audienceSpontaneous social coordination has been extensively described in natural sett...
Reciprocity is a simple principle for cooperation that explains many of the patterns of how humans s...
Dynamic, naturalistic study of social interactions in humans is a small but growing literature. Emer...
Evolutionary psychologists have proposed two processes that could give rise to the pervasiveness of ...
Reciprocity is a key concept for understanding social behaviour. It involves complex interactions of...
Ranging over a wide array of interactions, coordination comprises the simple to complex interactions...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Cognition materializes in an interpersonal space. The emergence of complex behaviors requires the co...
Research on linguistic interaction suggests that two or more individuals can sometimes form adaptive...