Dynamics in Social-viewing Context
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- STATUS
- Not Recruiting
Summary
This study attempts to explore whether television messages generate physiological and behavioral synchrony (i.e., concomitant changes in the physiological activity of two or more people) in TV co-viewers. The study also asks how different types of emotional messages and social viewing contexts alter that physiological and behavioral synchronization, and whether the degree of the synchrony influences the variance and strength of co-viewers? attitudes towards media content.
Description
This study attempts to explore whether television messages generate physiological and behavioral synchrony (i.e., concomitant changes in the physiological activity of two or more people) in TV co-viewers. The study also asks how different types of emotional messages and social viewing contexts alter that physiological and behavioral synchronization, and whether the degree of the synchrony influences the variance and strength of co-viewers? attitudes towards media content.
Details
| Condition | healthy |
|---|---|
| Age | 100years or below |
| Clinical Study Identifier | TX8554 |
| Last Modified on | 19 February 2024 |
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