International audienceDuring social interaction, both participants are continuously active, each modifying their own actions in response to the continuously changing actions of the partner. This continuous mutual adaptation results in interactional synchrony to which both members contribute. Freely exchanging the role of imitator and model is a well-framed example of interactional synchrony resulting from a mutual behavioral negotiation. How the participants' brain activity underlies this process is currently a question that hyperscanning recordings allow us to explore. In particular, it remains largely unknown to what extent oscillatory synchronization could emerge between two brains during social interaction. To explore this issue, 18 par...
In our daily life, we often synchronize our behavior with others: We unconsciously mimic others’ bod...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...
International audienceDuring social interaction, both participants are continuously active, each mod...
During social interaction, both participants are continuously active, each modifying their own actio...
Since 2002, a new neuroimaging technique called hyperscanning allows to record several participants ...
Recently, neurophysiological findings about social interaction have been investigated widely, and ha...
nsaa061The recent decade has seen a shift from artificial and environmentally deprived experiments i...
Music’s deeply interpersonal nature suggests that music-derived neuroplasticity relates to interpers...
Cooperation and competition are two ways of social interaction keys to life in society. Recent EEG-b...
Recently, neurophysiological findings about social interaction have been investigated widely, and ha...
Music's deeply interpersonal nature suggests that music-derived neuroplasticity relates to interpers...
Cooperation and competition are two ways of social interaction keys to life in society. Recent EEG-b...
In social interactions, each individual's brain drives an action that, in turn, elicits systematic n...
In our daily life, we often synchronize our behavior with others: We unconsciously mimic others’ bod...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...
International audienceDuring social interaction, both participants are continuously active, each mod...
During social interaction, both participants are continuously active, each modifying their own actio...
Since 2002, a new neuroimaging technique called hyperscanning allows to record several participants ...
Recently, neurophysiological findings about social interaction have been investigated widely, and ha...
nsaa061The recent decade has seen a shift from artificial and environmentally deprived experiments i...
Music’s deeply interpersonal nature suggests that music-derived neuroplasticity relates to interpers...
Cooperation and competition are two ways of social interaction keys to life in society. Recent EEG-b...
Recently, neurophysiological findings about social interaction have been investigated widely, and ha...
Music's deeply interpersonal nature suggests that music-derived neuroplasticity relates to interpers...
Cooperation and competition are two ways of social interaction keys to life in society. Recent EEG-b...
In social interactions, each individual's brain drives an action that, in turn, elicits systematic n...
In our daily life, we often synchronize our behavior with others: We unconsciously mimic others’ bod...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...
International audienceIntroductionSynchrony refers to individuals’ temporal coordination during soci...