# Romantic Partners with Mismatched Relationship Satisfaction Showed Greater Interpersonal Neural Synchrony When Co-Viewing Emotive Videos: An Exploratory Pilot fNIRS Hyperscanning Study

**Authors:** Wen Xiu Heng, Li Ying Ng, Zen Ziyi Goh, Gianluca Esposito, Atiqah Azhari

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/neurosci6020055 · NeuroSci · 2025-06-12

## TL;DR

Couples with differing levels of relationship satisfaction showed more brain activity coordination when watching emotional videos together, suggesting deeper social interaction.

## Contribution

This is the first study to explore how relationship satisfaction differences influence neural synchrony during shared emotional experiences.

## Key findings

- Couples with mismatched relationship satisfaction showed greater interpersonal neural synchrony in right ventral prefrontal cortex regions.
- Greater synchrony was observed in brain areas linked to emotional regulation and processing during co-viewing of emotive videos.
- Findings suggest that mismatched satisfaction may enhance mutual social cognitive processes during shared emotional experiences.

## Abstract

Emotional attunement, or emotional co-regulation in a relationship, can manifest as interpersonal neural synchrony, where partners exhibit similar anti-phase or phase-shifted brain activity. In adult romantic relationships, emotional attunement may differ according to relationship satisfaction. No study has examined how relationship satisfaction difference influences interpersonal neural synchrony. This exploratory pilot study on 17 couples (unmarried Chinese undergraduate couples in a Southeast Asian university) investigated whether relationship satisfaction difference influenced interpersonal neural synchrony during a shared emotive experience. Each couple wore an fNIRS cap to measure brain activity in their prefrontal cortex (PFC) while co-viewing seven videos intended to evoke positive, negative or neutral emotions. We found preliminary evidence that relationship satisfaction difference modulated interpersonal neural synchrony in the right ventral PFC regions, including the right ventromedial PFC (involved in the encoding of emotional values to stimuli and emotional regulation), right ventrolateral PFC (involved in voluntary emotional regulation) and the right orbitofrontal cortex (involved in processing of emotional experiences and regulation of emotions). This suggested that couples with mismatched relationship satisfaction displayed greater interpersonal neural synchrony, possibly due to mutual social cognitive processes when viewing emotive videos together. Further studies can replicate the findings with larger, diverse samples.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** pain (MESH:D010146), injury to (MESH:D014947)
- **Chemicals:** oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12196001/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12196001