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. 2024 Aug 24;14:19666. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-69678-9

Figure 8.

Figure 8

Objects in the game environment influence interpersonal movement coordination. FDR-corrected significance levels are indicated by *** (p < .001). (A) Coordination across the target cycle: lines and shaded areas represent mean and standard error of the mean strength of relation from one target collection event to the next, separate for the two joint play conditions (joint play SAME = light green, joint play DIFF = dark green). (B) Coordination as a function of obstacle visibility for the average of SAME and DIFF: players’ steering movements are more strongly related when the ball is closest to an obstacle that both players can see (light green bar and violin plot), versus neither or only one of them (dark green bar and violin plot). (C) Coordination as a function of obstacle visibility, separate plots for joint play DIFF and SAME: while the interaction effect between visibility and joint play condition is not significant (p = .105), coordination appears higher around obstacles that no one can see (SAME, dark green bar and violin) compared to obstacles that only one player can see (DIFF, medium green bar and violin).