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Consensus-building conversation leads to neural alignment

Psychology

Consensus-building conversation leads to neural alignment

B. Sievers, C. Welker, et al.

Discover how consensus-building conversations can reshape brain activity! This captivating research, conducted by Beau Sievers, Christopher Welker, Uri Hasson, Adam M. Kleinbaum, and Thalia Wheatley, reveals that achieving consensus not only aligns brain activity among participants but also influences their social dynamics. Don't miss out on this exciting exploration!... show more
Abstract
Conversation is a primary means of social influence, but its effects on brain activity remain unknown. Previous work on conversation and social influence has emphasized public compliance, largely setting private beliefs aside. Here, we show that consensus-building conversation aligns future brain activity within groups, with alignment persisting through novel experiences participants did not discuss. Participants watched ambiguous movie clips during fMRI scanning, then conversed in groups with the goal of coming to a consensus about each clip’s narrative. After conversation, participants’ brains were scanned while viewing the clips again, along with novel clips from the same movies. Groups that reached consensus showed greater similarity of brain activity after conversation. Participants perceived as having high social status spoke more and signaled disbelief in others, and their groups had unique turn-taking and lower neural alignment. By contrast, participants with central positions in their real-world networks encouraged others to speak, facilitating greater group neural alignment. Socially central participants were also more likely to become neurologically aligned to others in their groups.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 10, 2024
Authors
Beau Sievers, Christopher Welker, Uri Hasson, Adam M. Kleinbaum, Thalia Wheatley
Tags
brain activity
consensus-building
fMRI
social status
neural alignment
social network
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