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回首頁 演講訊息 115.06.03(三) 14:30 鄭任唐 博士候選人〈Individual Differences and Neural Bases of Technology-Mediated Verbal and Nonverbal Communication〉
05/28/2026

115.06.03(三) 14:30 鄭任唐 博士候選人〈Individual Differences and Neural Bases of Technology-Mediated Verbal and Nonverbal Communication〉

  • 演講時間: 115年6月3日(三) 14:30
  • 演講地點: N100
  • 講者: 鄭任唐 博士候選人 (國立臺灣大學心理系)
  • 演講主題: Individual Differences and Neural Bases of Technology-Mediated Verbal and Nonverbal Communication

畢業演講 14:30-15:30

Technology-mediated communication has become increasingly central to everyday social interaction, yet its psychological and neural consequences remain incompletely understood. When people communicate through video conferencing systems or interact with AI agents, the social conditions of communication are altered: the interlocutor may be nonhuman, nonverbal cues may be reduced, and the emotional context may become ambiguous. This study examined how such technological mediation influences communicative experience, cognitive performance, and neural processing, with particular attention to individual differences.

Two complementary experiments were conducted. The first used an fMRI agent-interaction task to compare brain responses during interactions with human partners and chatbots, and examined whether subjective ratings of fluency, sociality, and human-likeness were associated with distinct neural activation patterns. The second investigated video conferencing, testing how camera use, emotional climate, and personality traits jointly predicted memory retention and attentional performance.

Results suggested that chatbots interaction elicited stronger engagement of attention and cognitive control networks, indicating that communicating with AI may require greater cognitive resources than human interaction. In video meetings, camera use itself did not significantly affect memory performance. Instead, personality-related factors were more predictive: higher agreeableness was associated with poorer memory, and extraverts showed reduced recall in emotionally neutral contexts. Overall, the findings suggest that the effects of technology-mediated communication depend more on individual characteristics and socio-emotional context than on technological format alone.

回首頁 演講訊息 115.06.03(三) 14:30 鄭任唐 博士候選人〈Individual Differences and Neural Bases of Technology-Mediated Verbal and Nonverbal Communication〉