English

Bridging the gap between emotion and joint action

Neurons and Cognition 2021-08-16 v1 Machine Learning Multiagent Systems Robotics Dynamical Systems

Abstract

Our daily human life is filled with a myriad of joint action moments, be it children playing, adults working together (i.e., team sports), or strangers navigating through a crowd. Joint action brings individuals (and embodiment of their emotions) together, in space and in time. Yet little is known about how individual emotions propagate through embodied presence in a group, and how joint action changes individual emotion. In fact, the multi-agent component is largely missing from neuroscience-based approaches to emotion, and reversely joint action research has not found a way yet to include emotion as one of the key parameters to model socio-motor interaction. In this review, we first identify the gap and then stockpile evidence showing strong entanglement between emotion and acting together from various branches of sciences. We propose an integrative approach to bridge the gap, highlight five research avenues to do so in behavioral neuroscience and digital sciences, and address some of the key challenges in the area faced by modern societies.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2108.06264,
  title  = {Bridging the gap between emotion and joint action},
  author = {M. M. N. Bieńkiewicz and A. Smykovskyi and T. Olugbade and S. Janaqi and A. Camurri and N. Bianchi-Berthouze and M. Björkman and B. G. Bardy},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.06264},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

Pages 44, Figures 6, Table 1, Article in press, Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews

R2 v1 2026-06-24T05:05:54.625Z