An interaction-centric approach for quantifying eye-to-eye reciprocal interaction

Ray Lee, Paul Sajda, Nim Tottenham

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study presents an interaction-centric framework for analytically investigating brain-to-brain dynamics during eye contact, advancing beyond the traditional spectator model. The foundation of the interactor approach is to delineate the interaction. To achieve this, simultaneous brain activity engaged in eye contact was captured using hyperscanning fMRI. The BOLD responses were first divided into eye-to-eye reciprocal interaction and eye-to-face non-reciprocal communication based on the experimental design; then the reciprocal interaction response was further differentiated into sensory-based (exogenous) and mind-based (endogenous) components to characterize agentic interaction. The proposed interactor approach not only determines interaction from dyadic brain states but also computes emergent interactive brain states arising from the interaction. To achieve these, reciprocal interactive fMRI responses were quantified into an interaction matrix, from which interaction-induced communication channels were identified using Correspondence Analysis, and information flow within those channels was measured with Mutual Information. The advantage of the interactor approach is its ability to reveal emergent dyadic brain states that a spectator approach cannot fully unravel. When applied to parent-child eye contact, this method confirmed existing developmental findings, clarified previous inconsistencies, and uncovered new insights into how reciprocal social engagement shapes brain function.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number121175
JournalNeuroImage
Volume311
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Communication channel
  • Correspondence analysis
  • Developmental brain
  • Dual system
  • Eye contact
  • Eye-to-eye reciprocal interaction
  • Interaction matrix
  • Mutual information
  • Parent-child pairs

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Neurology
  • Cognitive Neuroscience

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