Neural decoding of competitive decision-making in Rock-Paper-Scissors using EEG hyperscanning
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Social interactions are fundamental to daily life, yet social neuroscience research has often studied individuals’ brains in isolation. Hyperscanning, the simultaneous recording of neural data from multiple participants, enables real-time investigation of social processes by examining multiple brains while they interact. Previous hyperscanning research has mostly focused on cooperative tasks and remains limited in competitive contexts. Here, we obtained electroencephalography (EEG) hyperscanning data for 62 participants (31 pairs) who played a computerised version of the Rock-Paper-Scissors game, a classic paradigm for studying competitive decision-making. Although the optimal strategy is to be unpredictable and thus act randomly, participants exhibited behavioural biases, deviating from this ideal. Using multivariate decoding methods, we found that neural signals contained information about decisions made by participants during gameplay, revealing certain strategies. Notably, losers showed unique reliance on prior trials, suggesting memory-based strategies that may impair optimal performance. These results reveal how competitive decision-making is shaped by cognitive biases and memory of previous outcomes, highlighting the difficulty of achieving randomness in strategic contexts. This work advances our understanding of decision-making and cognitive dynamics in competitive interactions.