The Times Australia
Google AI
The Times World News

.

Got Zoom fatigue? Out-of-sync brainwaves could be another reason videoconferencing is such a drag

  • Written by Julie Boland, Professor of Psychology and Linguistics, University of Michigan
Got Zoom fatigue? Out-of-sync brainwaves could be another reason videoconferencing is such a drag

During the pandemic, video calls became a way for me to connect with my aunt in a nursing home and with my extended family during holidays. Zoom was how I enjoyed trivia nights, happy hours and live performances. As a university professor, Zoom was also the way I conducted all of my work meetings, mentoring and teaching.

But I often felt drained after Zoom sessions, even some of those that I had scheduled for fun. Several well-known factors[1] – intense eye contact, slightly misaligned eye contact, being on camera, limited body movement, lack of nonverbal communication – contribute to Zoom fatigue. But I was curious about why conversation felt more laborious and awkward over Zoom and other video-conferencing software, compared with in-person interactions.

As a researcher who studies psychology and linguistics[2], I decided to examine the impact of video-conferencing on conversation. Together with three undergraduate students, I ran two experiments[3].

The first experiment found that response times to prerecorded yes/no questions more than tripled when the questions were played over Zoom instead of being played from the participant’s own computer.

The second experiment replicated the finding in natural, spontaneous conversation between friends. In that experiment, transition times between speakers averaged 135 milliseconds in person, but 487 milliseconds for the same pair talking over Zoom. While under half a second seems pretty quick, that difference is an eternity in terms of natural conversation rhythms.

We also found that people held the floor for longer during Zoom conversations, so there were fewer transitions between speakers. These experiments suggest that the natural rhythm of conversation is disrupted by videoconferencing apps like Zoom.

Cognitive anatomy of a conversation

I already had some expertise in studying conversation. Pre-pandemic, I conducted several experiments investigating how topic shifts and working memory load affect the timing of when speakers in a conversation take turns.

In that research, I found that pauses between speakers were longer[4] when the two speakers were talking about different things, or if a speaker was distracted by another task while conversing. I originally became interested in the timing of turn transitions because planning a response during conversation is a complex process that people accomplish with lightning speed.

The average pause between speakers in two-party conversations is about one-fifth of a second. In comparison, it takes more than a half-second to move your foot from the accelerator to the brake[5] while driving – more than twice as long.

The speed of turn transitions indicates that listeners don’t wait until the end of a speaker’s utterance to begin planning a response. Rather, listeners simultaneously comprehend the current speaker, plan a response and predict the appropriate time to initiate that response. All of this multitasking ought to make conversation quite laborious, but it is not.

Getting in sync

Brainwaves are the rhythmic firing, or oscillation, of neurons in your brain. These oscillations may be one factor that helps make conversation effortless. Several[6] researchers[7] have proposed that a neural oscillatory mechanism automatically synchronizes the firing rate of a group of neurons to the speech rate of your conversation partner. This oscillatory timing mechanism would relieve some of the mental effort in planning when to begin speaking, especially if it was combined with predictions[8] about the remainder of your partner’s utterance.

While there are many open questions about how oscillatory mechanisms affect perception and behavior, there is direct[9] evidence[10] for neural oscillators that track syllable rate when syllables are presented at regular intervals. For example, when you hear syllables four times a second, the electrical activity in your brain peaks at the same rate[11].

A spectrograph of human speech with a rough sine wave overlaid on it
This acoustic spectrogram of the utterance ‘Do you think surfers are scared of being bitten by a shark?’ has an overlaid oscillatory function (blue wave). This shows that midpoints of most syllables (numbered hash marks) occur at or near the wave troughs, regardless of syllable length. The hash marks were generated with a Praat script written by deJong and Wempe. Julie Boland, CC BY-ND[12]

There is also evidence that oscillators can accommodate some variability[13] in syllable rate. This makes the notion that an automatic neural oscillator could track the fuzzy rhythms of speech plausible. For example, an oscillator with a period of 100 milliseconds could keep in sync with speech that varies from 80 milliseconds to 120 milliseconds per short syllable. Longer syllables are not a problem if their duration is a multiple of the duration for short syllables.

Internet lag is a wrench in the mental gears

My hunch was that this proposed oscillatory mechanism couldn’t function very well over Zoom due to variable transmission lags. In a video call, the audio and video signals are split into packets that zip across the internet. In our studies, each packet took around 30 to 70 milliseconds to travel from sender to receiver, including disassembly and reassembly.

While this is very fast, it adds too much additional variability for brainwaves to sync with speech rates automatically, and more arduous mental operations have to take over. This could help explain my sense that Zoom conversations were more fatiguing than having the same conversation in person would have been.

Our experiments[14] demonstrated that the natural rhythm of turn transitions between speakers is disrupted by Zoom. This disruption is consistent with what would happen if the neural ensemble that researchers believe normally synchronizes with speech[15] fell out of sync due to electronic transmission delays.

Our evidence supporting this explanation is indirect. We did not measure cortical oscillations, nor did we manipulate the electronic transmission delays. Research into the connection between neural oscillatory timing mechanisms and speech in general is promising[16] but not definitive.

Researchers in the field need to pin down an oscillatory mechanism for naturally occurring speech. From there, cortical tracking techniques could show whether such a mechanism is more stable in face-to-face conversations than with video-conferencing conversations, and how much lag and how much variability cause disruption.

Could the syllable-tracking oscillator tolerate relatively short but realistic electronic lags below 40 milliseconds, even if they varied dynamically from 15 to 39 milliseconds? Could it tolerate relatively long lags of 100 milliseconds if the transmission lag were constant instead of variable?

The knowledge gained from such research could open the door to technological improvements that help people get in sync and make videoconferencing conversations less of a cognitive drag.

[Understand new developments in science, health and technology, each week. Subscribe to The Conversation’s science newsletter[17].]

Read more https://theconversation.com/got-zoom-fatigue-out-of-sync-brainwaves-could-be-another-reason-videoconferencing-is-such-a-drag-172380

Times Magazine

Efficient Water Carts for Dust Control

Managing dust effectively is a critical challenge across numerous industries in Australia. From sp...

How new rules could stop AI scrapers destroying the internet

Australians are among the most anxious in the world[1] about artificial intelligence (AI). This...

Why Car Enthusiasts Are Turning to Container Shipping for Interstate Moves

Moving across the country requires careful planning and plenty of patience. The scale of domestic ...

What to know if you’re considering an EV

Soaring petrol prices are once again making many Australians think seriously[1] about switching ...

Epson launches ELPCS01 mobile projector cart

Designed for the EB-810E[1] projector and provides easy setup for portable displays in flexible ...

Governance Models for Headless CMS in Large Organizations

Where headless CMS is adopted by large enterprises, governance is the single most crucial factor d...

The Times Features

HARRY POTTER™: THE EXHIBITION TICKETS NOW ON SALE!

An Enchanting Exhibition Celebrating the world of Harry Potter Opens in SYDNEY on 14 MAY Get r...

Leader of The Nationals Matt Canavan - Sky News Interview

SKY NEWS TRANSCRIPT WITH HOST PETER STEFANOVIC; FUEL CRISIS; PAGE RESEARCH CENTRE REPORT ON LIQUID F...

Taste Port Douglas 10-year celebration

Serving up more than 40 events across four days, the anniversary edition  promises a vibrant cel...

Is dark chocolate healthier than milk chocolate? 2 dietitians explain

Easter chocolate is all over supermarket shelves. Some people reach straight for milk chocolat...

Compulsory super is higher than ever at 12%. But cutting it would hurt low-paid workers most

A central element of Australia’s superannuation system is the superannuation guarantee[1] (SG). ...

Grants open for port communities across the Hunter and Northern Rivers regions

Local organisations doing important work across the Hunter and Northern Rivers regions are being...

AI Is Already Here. The Question Is Whether Your Business Is Built for It

We sat down with Nirlep Adhikari — CTO at LoanOptions.ai and Founder of Mount Mindforce — to cut...

Cleared to Land — and Cleared to Die: How a Runway Failure Killed Two Pilots in Seconds

A modern passenger jet, operating under full clearance, descending onto a controlled runway at o...

Leader of The Nationals Matt Canavan - press conference

CANBERRA PARLIAMENT HOUSE PRESS CONFERENCE WITH SHADOW WATER MINISTER MICHAEL McCORMACK; MURRAY-DA...