Abstract

Synchronization of human networks is fundamental in many aspects of human endeavour. Recently, much research effort has been spent on analyzing how motor coordination emerges in human groups (from rocking chairs to violin players) and how it is affected by coupling structure and strength. Here we uncover the spontaneous emergence of leadership (based on physical signaling during group interaction) as a crucial factor steering the occurrence of synchronization in complex human networks where individuals perform a joint motor task. In two experiments engaging participants in an arm movement synchronization task, in the physical world as well as in the digital world, we found that specific patterns of leadership emerged and increased synchronization performance. Precisely, three patterns were found, involving a subtle interaction between phase of the motion and amount of influence. Such patterns were independent of the presence or absence of physical interaction, and persisted across manipulated spatial configurations. Our results shed light on the mechanisms that drive coordination and leadership in human groups, and are consequential for the design of interactions with artificial agents, avatars or robots, where social roles can be determinant for a successful interaction.

Highlights

  • Synchronization of human networks is fundamental in many aspects of human endeavour

  • To date no systematic study was carried out to understand, in a controlled set-up, how influential each player is in steering the dynamics of a complex human network towards synchronization despite leadership emergence having been highlighted as a crucial phenomenon to understand such behaviour in the animal ­world[9,16,17,18,19,20]

  • Our results reveal that leadership emergence is a crucial phenomenon that organizes the dynamics of complex human network performing a joint oscillatory task, such as violin players studied in earlier w­ ork[11]

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Summary

Introduction

Synchronization of human networks is fundamental in many aspects of human endeavour. Recently, much research effort has been spent on analyzing how motor coordination emerges in human groups (from rocking chairs to violin players) and how it is affected by coupling structure and strength. We uncover the spontaneous emergence of leadership (based on physical signaling during group interaction) as a crucial factor steering the occurrence of synchronization in complex human networks where individuals perform a joint motor task. Synchronization is a common feature in many human activities from sports to dancing and music p­ laying[1,2,3] It is a typical collective behaviour in many animal groups, from schools of fish and flocks of birds to insect ­swarms[4,5,6,7,8,9]. Synchronization in complex human networks has been the subject of recent work that showed the influence on its emergence of the coupling structure between individuals in a ­group[10,11], even after perceptual contact is ­interrupted[12], as well as of the coupling strength and presence of delays in the interaction.

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