Data from: Playing 20 Questions with the mind: collaborative problem solving by humans using a brain-to-brain interface

Stocco, Andrea , University of Washington Prat, Chantel S. , University of Washington Losey, Darby M. , University of Washington Cronin, Jeneva A. , University of Washington Wu, Joseph , University of Washington Abernethy, Justin A. , University of Washington Rao, Rajesh P. N. , University of Washington Publication date: August 26, 2016 Publisher: Dryad https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.g15k7

Citation Stocco, Andrea et al. (2016), Data from: Playing 20 Questions with the mind: collaborative problem solving by humans using a brain-to-brain interface, Dryad, Dataset, https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.g15k7

Abstract

We present, to our knowledge, the first demonstration that a non-invasive brain-to-brain interface (BBI) can be used to allow one human to guess what is on the mind of another human through an interactive question-and-answering paradigm similar to the “20 Questions” game. As in previous non-invasive BBI studies in humans, our interface uses electroencephalography (EEG) to detect specific patterns of brain activity from one participant (the “respondent”), and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to deliver functionally-relevant information to the brain of a second participant (the “inquirer”). Our results extend previous BBI research by (1) using stimulation of the visual cortex to convey visual stimuli that are privately experienced and consciously perceived by the inquirer; (2) exploiting real-time rather than off-line communication of information from one brain to another; and (3) employing an interactive task, in which the inquirer and respondent must exchange information bi-directionally to collaboratively solve the task. The results demonstrate that using the BBI, ten participants (five inquirer-respondent pairs) can successfully identify a “mystery item” using a true/false question-answering protocol similar to the “20 Questions” game, with high levels of accuracy that are significantly greater than a control condition in which participants were connected through a sham BBI.

Usage Notes

20Q Behavioral Data and Analysis Script Raw and processed data for the "20 Question" Brain-to-brain experiment. Contains the data, the analysis script, and additional figures. 20QDataDryad.zip

References