Boosting social attunement in autism via interpersonal sensorimotor synchronization therapy KU Leuven
Humans are social beings by excellence. Almost all of our waking lives are spent in close company of others. As a result of this social and bodily embeddedness, biological and behavioral processes become entrained and coordinated with the interacting partner (i.e. biobehavioral synchrony). Paradoxically, however, socio-affective neuroscience approaches typically examine individual humans in isolation, presenting social signals on a computer ...