Interbrain synchrony and its potential role in modulating the impact of traumatic events
Oded Mayo, Yael Molcho-Fisher, Yarden Avnor, Simone Shamay-Tsoory

TL;DR
This study explores how brain synchronization between people may help reduce trauma symptoms after a traumatic event.
Contribution
The study shows that higher interbrain synchrony is linked to reduced trauma symptoms following a real-world traumatic event.
Findings
Higher interbrain synchrony was associated with fewer trauma-related symptoms after exposure to a terrorist attack.
The effect of interbrain synchrony was strongest in the left pre-motor cortex.
Interbrain synchrony appears to buffer the negative impact of trauma exposure.
Abstract
Exposure to traumatic events has far-reaching effects on mental health. While social factors are known to exert buffering effects on trauma exposure, the underlying neural mechanisms that mediate these effects remain largely unexplored. Since interbrain synchrony is associated with social connectedness, we investigate whether individuals exhibiting a higher tendency for interbrain synchrony demonstrate reduced trauma-related symptoms. To examine whether interbrain synchrony assessed before trauma exposure moderated response to traumatic events, 98 participants who had previously participated in a hyperscanning functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) study, which measured interbrain synchrony during an initial interaction with a stranger, were contacted following the terrorist attack in Israel on October 7th, 2023. They completed a questionnaire assessing their level of trauma…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAction Observation and Synchronization · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Hemispheric Asymmetry in Neuroscience
