Delta-band audience brain synchrony tracks engagement with live and recorded dance

Rai, Laura A.; Lee, Haeeun; Becke, Emma; Trenado, Carlos; Abad-Hernando, Sonia; Sperling, Matthias; Vidaurre, Diego; Wald-Fuhrmann, Melanie; Richardson, Daniel C.; Ward, Jamie A and Orgs, Guido. 2025. Delta-band audience brain synchrony tracks engagement with live and recorded dance. iScience, ISSN 2589-0042 [Article] (In Press)

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Abstract or Description

Evolutionary theories claim that dance and music have evolved as collective rituals for social bonding and signaling. Yet, neuroscientific studies of these art forms typically involve people watching video or sound recordings alone in a laboratory. Across three live performances of a dance choreography, we simultaneously measured real-time dynamics between the brains of up to 23 audience members using mobile wet-electrode EEG. Interpersonal neural synchrony (INS) in the delta band (1?4 Hz) was highest when performers directly interacted with audience members (breaking the fourth wall) and varied systematically with the dancers? movements and artistically predicted and actual continuous engagement. In follow-up studies using video recordings of the performance, we show that audience brain synchrony and engagement are highest when dance is experienced live and together. Our study shows that the ancient social functions of the performing arts are preserved in engagement with contemporary dance.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2025.112922

Additional Information:

Additional resources: Pre-registration of data collection and analysis: https://aspredicted.org/w9sy9.pdf.

Keywords:

Natural sciences, Biological sciences, Neuroscience, Behavioral neuroscience, Clinical neuroscience Cognitive neuroscience

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Computing
Psychology

Dates:

DateEvent
11 June 2025Accepted
7 July 2025Published

Item ID:

39184

Date Deposited:

14 Jul 2025 09:57

Last Modified:

14 Jul 2025 09:57

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/39184

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