2021
DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.531915
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Neurophysiological Synchrony Between Children With Severe Physical Disabilities and Their Parents During Music Therapy

Abstract: Although physiological synchronization has been associated with the level of empathy in emotionally meaningful relationships, little is known about the interbrain synchrony between non-speaking children with severe disabilities and their familial caregivers. In a repeated measures observational study, we ascertained the degree of interbrain synchrony during music therapy in 10 child-parent dyads, where the children were non-speaking and living with severe motor impairments. Interbrain synchrony was quantified … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…So far, correlation approaches have been used in parent–child studies (Atzaba‐Poria et al., 2017; Krzeczkowski et al., 2020) to compute how behavior and brain activity covary within the dyad. Causal measures (e.g., Granger) have been used to compute the direction of influence from the adult on the child (or vice versa) (Leong et al., 2017; Samadani et al., 2021; Santamaria et al., 2020). Specifically, if one signal X (e.g., the mother EEG) influences a second signal Y (e.g., the child EEG), then trying to predict the signal Y based on a combination of X and Y's past should give better results than when trying to predict Y based on Y's past alone.…”
Section: Dual‐eeg Analysis Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So far, correlation approaches have been used in parent–child studies (Atzaba‐Poria et al., 2017; Krzeczkowski et al., 2020) to compute how behavior and brain activity covary within the dyad. Causal measures (e.g., Granger) have been used to compute the direction of influence from the adult on the child (or vice versa) (Leong et al., 2017; Samadani et al., 2021; Santamaria et al., 2020). Specifically, if one signal X (e.g., the mother EEG) influences a second signal Y (e.g., the child EEG), then trying to predict the signal Y based on a combination of X and Y's past should give better results than when trying to predict Y based on Y's past alone.…”
Section: Dual‐eeg Analysis Techniquesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, bringing the 'lab to the field' can also imply focussing on a common aspect of children's music therapy in a laboratory research setting. A recent study [70] was creating an experimental setting which resembled a setting in which parents would join a MT session or watch a session behind an observation window while waiting. The researchers measured the dual-EEG of a child and the parent while the parent was watching the facial expressions of their child participating in music therapy on a video screen in another room.…”
Section: Research Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The parents 'had exclusively a frontal view of the faces of their children. This design was adapted to emulate current clinical practice' [70] (Samadani et al, 2021, p. 3). This research setting allowed good data recording control (at least on the side of the sitting parent), and enabled analysing the interbrain synchrony between parent-child dyads during parents observing their child's facial expressions.…”
Section: Research Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach aligns musical interaction with physiological changes as they occur over time, providing a structure to investigate mechanisms of change ( 37 ). Several examples include analysis of EEG and ECG and clinical improvisation between client-therapist dyads in stroke rehabilitation ( 15 ), EEG and music-evoked imagery between a participant-therapist dyad in a psychotherapy session ( 39 ), EEG and active music therapy between children and their observing parents ( 40 ), and EEG and active music therapy between a participant and clinician and the participant's observing parent ( 41 ). Understanding how individual brains relate to interactive, relational therapies can help shape the therapeutic approach.…”
Section: Research Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%