ePoster

THE MAZE OF CREATIVE COLLABORATION: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF FNIRS HYPERSCANNING EVIDENCE IN COLLABORATIVE CREATIVITY

Zhino Ebrahimiand 3 co-authors

University of Kaiserslautern-Landau (RPTU)

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS04-08PM-372

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS04-08PM-372

Poster preview

THE MAZE OF CREATIVE COLLABORATION: A SYSTEMATIC REVIEW AND META-ANALYSIS OF FNIRS HYPERSCANNING EVIDENCE IN COLLABORATIVE CREATIVITY poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS04-08PM-372

Abstract

Creative collaboration relies on idea exchange, shared attention, and meaning negotiation, reflected in inter-brain synchrony (IBS). The functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) hyperscanning technique is used to quantify IBS during naturalistic interaction; however, creativity-related findings are methodologically heterogeneous and sometimes inconsistent. Following PRISMA-style procedures, we searched Web of Science, Scopus, and PubMed for peer-reviewed studies (search to January 10th, 2026). Inclusion criteria required studies in or after 2000 with two or more participants performing a collaborative creativity/creativity-relevant task during fNIRS hyperscanning. We excluded non–peer-reviewed, clinical-population studies and studies focused exclusively on physiological synchrony. Search revealed 664 studies, independently screened by two expert raters in Rayyan (agreement 97.14%, Cohen’s κ=.79; N=664). The screening process led to 22 eligible studies; most used dyads (73%) and verbal/communication paradigms (64%). IBS was mostly estimated via wavelet-based coherence (91%). Evidence converged on prefrontal and temporo-parietal coupling during creative interaction, consistent with shared executive coordination and partner-modeling/meaning integration. Meta-analytic effect size showed task-dependent coupling profiles: divergent thinking/brainstorming and cooperative ideation most consistently increased IBS in prefrontal channels like dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC), whereas creative communication and collaborative design showed broader fronto-temporo-parietal coupling including superior temporal gyrus (STG), temporo-parietal junction (TPJ), and angular gyrus (AG). Across contrasts with extractable statistics (κ=16), creative-versus-control IBS differences were typically large (median d=1.24; range 0.43-1.70). IBS–performance associations (18 effects) were moderate on average (median |r|=0.39) but phase-/context-dependent, including occasional reversals (−0.44 to 0.85), supporting a balance between alignment and independent exploration rather than “more synchrony is always better.”

Recommended posters

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.