Sharing happy stories increases interpersonal closeness: Interpersonal brain synchronization as a neural indicator

Enhui Xie, Qing Yin, Keshuang Li, Xianchun Li*, Samuel A. Nastase, Ruqian Zhang, Ning Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Our lives revolve around sharing emotional stories (i.e., happy and sad stories) with other people. Such emotional communication enhances the similarity of story comprehension and neural across speaker-listener pairs. The theory of Emotions as Social Information Model (EASI) suggests that such emotional communication may influence interpersonal closeness. However, few studies have examined speaker-listener interpersonal brain synchronization (IBS) during emotional communication and whether it is associated with meaningful aspects of the speaker-listener interpersonal relationship. Here, one speaker watched emotional videos and communi-cated the content of the videos to 32 people as listeners (happy/sad/neutral group). Both speaker and listen-ers’ neural activities were recorded using EEG. After listening, we assessed the interpersonal closeness between the speaker and listeners. Compared with the sad group, sharing happy stories showed a better re-call quality and a higher rating of interpersonal closeness. The happy group showed higher IBS in the frontal cortex and left temporoparietal cortex than the sad group. The relationship between frontal IBS and interpersonal closeness was moderated by sharing happy/sad stories. Exploratory analysis using support vector regression (SVR) showed that the IBS could also predict the ratings of interpersonal closeness. These results suggest that frontal IBS could serve as an indicator of whether sharing emotional stories facilitate interpersonal closeness. These findings improve our understanding of emotional communication among individuals that guides behaviors during interpersonal interactions.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberENEURO.0245-21.2021
JournaleNeuro
Volume8
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Nov 2021

Keywords

  • Emotion
  • Interpersonal brain synchronization
  • Interpersonal closeness
  • Sharing stories

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