Use Case | Teamwork & Social/Behavioral Psych
Teamwork & Social/Behavioral Psychology | Use Case Citations
Your colleagues are using BIOPAC and publishing research on teamwork and social/behavioral psychology—see a sample of citations below.
Benefits
- Collect data from subjects wirelessly as they complete their tasks and interact with colleagues
- Get feedback from round-table and complex work exchanges
- Improve performance and understand group dynamics
- Increase training efficiency with real-time metrics
Technology Options
Eye Tracking
BioShirt wireless, wearable ECG and Respiration
MedeloOpt fNIRS+EEG
B-Alert X-Series EEG & Cognitive States
Facial Expression Analysis
Virtual Reality/Immersive Environments
Related Use Cases
Communications
Multiparticipant Studies
Workspace design
Other Industries
Productivity Analysis
Sports
Selected Citations
- Gu, Y., Ocampo, J. M. A., Oveis, C., & Algoe, S. B. (2020). Gratitude Expressions Improve Teammates’ Cardiovascular Stress Responses. After one member is randomly assigned to a gratitude or neutral expression, partners complete a stressful, ecologically valid teamwork paradigm. BIOPAC Product: MP150
- Stellar, J., Feinberg, M., & Keltner, D. (2014). When the selfish suffer: evidence for selective prosocial emotional and physiological responses to suffering egoists – ScienceDirect. Evolution and Human Behavior, 35(2), 140-147. Prosociality is fundamental to social relationships, but providing it indiscriminately risks exploitation by egoists. Past work demonstrates that individuals avoid these risks through a more selective form of prosociality, cooperating less and sharing fewer resources with egoists. BIOPAC Product: MP150
- Carvalho, H., & West, C. A. (2011). Voluntary participation in an active learning exercise leads to a better understanding of physiology | Advances in Physiology Education. Advances in Physiology Education, 35(1), 53-58. Students learn best when they are focused and thinking about the subject at hand. To teach physiology, we must offer opportunities for students to actively participate in class. BIOPAC Product: Biopac Student Lab
- Wu, X., Feng, C., Wanyan, X., Liu, S., Ding, L., Miao, C., … & He, X. (2018, July). How Shared Screen Affected Team Collaboration Task, A Case Study of Ergonomics Experiment on Team Situation Awareness | SpringerLink. In International Conference on Engineering Psychology and Cognitive Ergonomics (pp. 241-249). Springer, Cham. Team situation awareness (TSA) had significant influence on collaboration work. As the essential interface of human computer interaction (HCI), visual display terminal was helpful for task performance enhancement. BIOPAC Product: MP150
- Ringeval, F., Sonderegger, A., Sauer, J., & Lalanne, D. (2013, April). Introducing the RECOLA multimodal corpus of remote collaborative and affective interactions | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore. In 2013 10th IEEE international conference and workshops on automatic face and gesture recognition (FG) (pp. 1-8). IEEE. We present in this paper a new multimodal corpus of spontaneous collaborative and affective interactions in French: RECOLA, which is being made available to the research community. Participants were recorded in dyads during a video conference while completing a task requiring collaboration. BIOPAC Product: Biopac Student Lab
- Timberlake, M. D., Stefanidis, D., & Gardner, A. K. (2018). Examining the impact of surgical coaching on trainee physiologic response and basic skill acquisition | SpringerLink. Surgical endoscopy, 32(10), 4183-4190. We examined how problem-solving coaching impacts trainee skill acquisition and physiologic stress as well as how trainee sensitivity to feedback, known as self-monitoring ability, impacts coaching effectiveness. BIOPAC Product: BioNomadix
- Scheepers, D., de Wit, F., Ellemers, N., & Sassenberg, K. (2012). Social power makes the heart work more efficiently: Evidence from cardiovascular markers of challenge and threat – ScienceDirect. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 48(1), 371-374. Possessing social power is beneficial for a wide range of physical and psychological outcomes. BIOPAC Product: AcqKnowledge
- Jamieson, J. P., Nock, M. K., & Mendes, W. B. (2012). Mind over matter: Reappraising arousal improves cardiovascular and cognitive responses to stress. – PsycNET (apa.org). Journal of experimental psychology: General, 141(3), 417. To this end, we examined whether reappraising stress-induced arousal could improve cardiovascular outcomes and decrease attentional bias for emotionally negative information. BIOPAC Product: MP150
- Britton, J. C., Taylor, S. F., Berridge, K. C., Mikels, J. A., & Liberzon, I. (2006). Differential subjective and psychophysiological responses to socially and nonsocially generated emotional stimuli. – PsycNET (apa.org). Emotion, 6(1), 150. Sociality may determine the subjective experience and physiological response to emotional stimuli. Film segments induced socially and nonsocially generated emotions. BIOPAC Product: MP150
- Chen, E., & Paterson, L. Q. (2006). Neighborhood, family, and subjective socioeconomic status: How do they relate to adolescent health? – PsycNET (apa.org). Health Psychology, 25(6), 704. This study investigated the role of neighborhood, family, and individual subjective socioeconomic status (SES) in predicting adolescent physical health and psychological characteristics. BIOPAC Product: MP150
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