Intergenerational social programs provide opportunities for people of all ages to form new relationships. Furthermore, existing qualitative and behavioral evidence from such programs points to health and wellbeing benefits, yet the physiological consequences of repeated intergenerational encounters remain unknown. A deeper understanding of how such programs shape dyadic physiological responses will illuminate the mechanisms of relationship formation. Across a six-session collaborative drawing program, we tracked cardiac synchrony within 31 intergenerational (older/younger adult) and 30 same generation (younger adult) dyads. Each session, dyads completed self-report measures, then drew together and alone while we recorded participants' actions with motion capture and physiological signals (neural and cardiac) using functional near-infrared spectroscopy. Collaborative behavior, self-reported social closeness, and interpersonal distance (i.e., proximity) showed group-specific patterns, whereby interpersonal distance emerged as a promising objective measure of relationship development. Cardiac synchrony did not covary with group, task, an interaction thereof, or any measure of behavior or social closeness-yet there was a trending relationship between collaboration while drawing together and cardiac synchrony for intergenerational dyads only. In summary, cardiac synchrony pointed to marginally enhanced arousal during active collaboration between older and younger adults. Relationship development was better characterized, in this study, by behavior and self-report measures than cardiac synchrony.
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Ryssa Moffat
Luca Alexander Naudszus
Emily S. Cross
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
ETH Zurich
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Moffat et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893c96c1944d70ce04cac — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.70272