Similarity in Spontaneous Tempo Impacts Flow Experience and Coordination Dynamics During Joint Performance
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Individuals tend to perform simple rhythmic tasks at a characteristic tempo, known as their spontaneous motor tempo. This motor trait, whether one naturally moves at a faster or slower pace, has been implicated in the ability to perform with external rhythmic structure across various tasks and experimental settings. In daily life, external rhythms often emerge through social interaction, as we continuously adapt to and move with rhythms generated by others. While previous studies have shown that individuals with similar spontaneous tempi can synchronize better in structured tasks, the role of individuals’ spontaneous tempo in unstructured, dynamic social interactions remains untested. In the current study, we examined how individuals’ spontaneous tempo shapes interpersonal coordination and subjective experience during an open-ended, free-form dyadic movement task. We first assessed individuals’ tempo using a spontaneous tapping task. Then, we measured interpersonal coordination patterns, including synchrony and leader-follower dynamics using a joint improvisation task inspired by the mirror game. Specifically, we developed a novel platform, composed of large transparent touch screens that resemble a shared window, on which individuals could continuously improvise motion together in an intuitive and playful manner. Participants alternated between game rounds with a designated leader and game rounds of leaderless improvisation. Following the mirror game, we also measured individuals’ subjective experience using a flow questionnaire. We found that individuals with similar spontaneous tempi reported greater flow experience during joint performance. Furthermore, we found that individuals with similar spontaneous tempi tended to synchronize less and were more variable and dynamic in their coordination patterns, specifically during leaderless improvisation rounds. Finally, we found that flow experience was highest when a participant’s movement tempo during the mirror game aligned with their own spontaneous tempo, regardless of their partner’s. These findings highlight individual spontaneous tempo as a meaningful trait that shapes both coordination dynamics and subjective experience during creative joint performance.