Abstract

Improvising is essential for human development and is one of the most important characteristics of being human. However, how mental illness affects improvisation remains largely unknown. In this study we focused on socio-motor improvisation in individuals with schizophrenia, one of the more debilitating mental disorder. This represents the ability to improvise gestures during an interaction to promote sustained communication and shared attention. Using a novel paradigm called the mirror game and recently introduced to study joint improvisation, we recorded hand motions of two people mirroring each other. Comparing Schizophrenia patients and healthy controls skills during the game, we found that improvisation was impaired in schizophrenia patients. Patients also exhibited significantly higher difficulties to being synchronized with someone they follow but not when they were leaders of the joint improvisation game. Considering the correlation between socio-motor synchronization and socio-motor improvisation, these results suggest that synchronization does not only promote affiliation but also improvisation, being therefore an interesting key factor to enhance social skills in a clinical context. Moreover, socio-motor improvisation abnormalities were not associated with executive functioning, one traditional underpinning of improvisation. Altogether, our results suggest that even if both mental illness and improvisation differ from normal thinking and behavior, they are not two sides of the same coin, providing a direct evidence that being able to improvise in individual situations is fundamentally different than being able to improvise in a social context.

Highlights

  • Improvisation is commonly considered to be akin to insanity (Barrantes-Vidal, 2004)

  • We propose here to study this timely improvisation in individuals with schizophrenia through the scope of socio-motor improvisation and socio-motor synchronization

  • Our results suggest that socio-motor improvisation and cognitive improvisation do not share the same underlying processes and provide a direct evidence that being able to improvise in individual situations is fundamentally different than being able to improvise in a social context

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Summary

Introduction

Improvisation is commonly considered to be akin to insanity (Barrantes-Vidal, 2004). Famous so-called mad genius Syd Barrett, early lead singer, guitarist and principal songwriter behind the rock band Pink Floyd, or John Nash, the father of game theory and Nobel Prize in economics for “The pioneering analysis of equilibria in the theory of non-competitive games,” are exceptional cases of improvisers diagnosed with schizophrenia. Socio-Motor Improvisation in Schizophrenia misunderstanding and stigmatization (Thornicroft et al, 2009), Social impairment is a major symptom shared by mental illnesses (Giacco et al, 2012; Kidd, 2013), affecting patients functioning, outcomes and quality of life. “bizarre” motor behaviors (“weird” posturing or aimless movements), and deficits in socio-motor synchronization (“the natural tendency to synchronize gestures during a social interaction”), were considered as characteristic of some individuals with schizophrenia, leading to a lack of rapport and feelings of connectedness with these patients (Bleuler, 1950; Varlet et al, 2012). Whereas socio-motor synchronization capture to what extend people act within the same timing, we hypothesize that socio-motor improvisation, the ability to improvise timely and new gestures during a social interaction, is a necessary property for promoting sustained communication and shared attention. We propose here to study this timely improvisation in individuals with schizophrenia through the scope of socio-motor improvisation and socio-motor synchronization

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