How arousal impacts physiological synchrony in relationships

A team of researchers has examined what type of social interaction is required for people to display physiological synchrony — mutual changes in autonomic nervous system activity. The study also looked at whether the levels of autonomic arousal people share predicts affiliation and friendship interest between people.

Source: sciencedaily.com

Related posts

Optoelectronics gain spin control from chiral perovskites and III-V semiconductors

Study explores what motivates people to watch footage of disasters and extreme weather

True scale of carbon impact from long-distance travel revealed