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Abstract
This study investigated the relationship between motor synchrony and emotional alignment during virtual social interactions, a context largely unexplored despite its increased prevalence during the COVID-19 pandemic. Two strangers discussed pandemic-related difficulties in a virtual setting (Zoom). Results indicated that motor synchrony and emotional alignment emerged spontaneously, leading to decreased negative affect, increased positive affect, and heightened feelings of trust, liking, cohesion, self-other overlap, and perceived similarity. Higher synchrony was particularly associated with increased positive emotional alignment and liking, suggesting that virtual interactions might share similar social effects to face-to-face interactions. These findings have implications for interventions addressing social isolation.
Publisher
Scientific Reports
Published On
Jul 26, 2023
Authors
Hila Gvirts, Lya Ehrenfeld, Mini Sharma, Moran Mizrahi
Tags
motor synchrony
emotional alignment
virtual interactions
positive affect
trust
COVID-19
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