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Audience members’ hearts beat together at the theatre

Live theatre research

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New research led by the UCL Division of Psychological and Language Sciences (PaLS) has found that watching a live theatre performance can synchronize your heartbeat with other people in audience, regardless of if you know them or not.

The research was conducted by Dr Joe Devlin, Dr Daniel C. Richardson, John Hogan (all Department of Experimental Psychology) and Dr Helen Nuttall (Lancaster University). The team monitored the heart rates and electro dermal activity of 12 audience members at a live performance of the West End musical Dreamgirls. The team found that as well as alongside individuals’ emotional responses, the audience members’ hearts were also responding in unison, with their pulses speeding up and slowing down at the same rate.

Dr Devlin, who led the study, said: “Usually, a group of individuals will each have their own heart rates and rhythms, with little relationship to each other. But romantic couples or highly effective teammates will actually synchronise their hearts so that they beat in time with each other, which in itself is astounding.”

According to Encore Tickets, 59% of people say they have felt emotionally affected by a live performance, and 46% say they enjoy the theatre experience because of the atmosphere that comes with being in the audience.

Dr Devlin said, “Experiencing the live theatre performance was extraordinary enough to overcome group differences and produce a common physiological experience in the audience members.”

This synchrony continued even into the interval, between audience members who knew each other. Dr Devlin explained: “Our hypothesis is that it’s at this point, the interval, that the audience members are engaged with each other, discussing the show within their social groups. During this social interaction with each other, we can see that their in-group arousal synchronises with each other but not with the audience members as a whole.

“This clearly demonstrates that the physiological synchrony observed during the performance was strong enough to overcome social group differences and engage the audience as a whole.”

This research follows the team’s previous findings, which found that experiencing a live theatre performance could stimulate your cardiovascular system to the same extent as a 28 minute workout.

The study was commissioned by Encore Tickets, and will not be published in an academic journal.

Related

  • Dr Joe Devlin
  • Dr Daniel C. Richardson
  • John Hogan
  • Dr Helen Nuttall (Lancaster University)
  • UCL Experimental Psychology
  • Encore Tickets

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