
Maria Tomprou
· Assistant Teaching Professor of Organizational Behavior and TheoryVerifiedCarnegie Mellon University · Economics
Active 2007–2022
Research topics
- Communication
- Cognitive psychology
- Biology
- Psychology
Selected publications
Speaking out of turn: How video conferencing reduces vocal synchrony and collective intelligence
PLoS ONE · 2021 · 79 citations
1st authorCorresponding- Psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Communication
Collective intelligence (CI) is the ability of a group to solve a wide range of problems. Synchrony in nonverbal cues is critically important to the development of CI; however, extant findings are mostly based on studies conducted face-to-face. Given how much collaboration takes place via the internet, does nonverbal synchrony still matter and can it be achieved when collaborators are physically separated? Here, we hypothesize and test the effect of nonverbal synchrony on CI that develops through visual and audio cues in physically-separated teammates. We show that, contrary to popular belief, the presence of visual cues surprisingly has no effect on CI; furthermore, teams without visual cues are more successful in synchronizing their vocal cues and speaking turns, and when they do so, they have higher CI. Our findings show that nonverbal synchrony is important in distributed collaboration and call into question the necessity of video support.
Frequent coauthors
- 10 shared
Ioannis Nikolaou
- 8 shared
Denise M. Rousseau
- 6 shared
Sarah Bankins
- 6 shared
Samantha D. Hansen
University of Toronto
- 5 shared
Greet Van Hoye
Ghent University Hospital
- 5 shared
Filip Lievens
Singapore Management University
- 5 shared
Eveline Schollaert
Ghent University
- 5 shared
Hennie J. Kriek
University of South Africa
Similar researchers at Carnegie Mellon University
- Resume-aware match score
- Save to shortlist
- AI-drafted outreach
See your match with Maria Tomprou
PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.
- Free to start
- No credit card
- 30-second signup