“…The first observation is that completing the individual task before the joint task did not affect the emergence of the joint attentional blink. Completing the individual task first could have increased the potential for a joint attentional blink because recent work suggests that experience with a movement task increases the accuracy of action perception (e.g., Chandrasekharan et al, 2012 ; Wong et al, 2013 ), increases the responsiveness of cortical areas activated during action observation ( Calvo-Merino et al, 2005 ; Catmur et al, 2007 ), and affects the manner in which a co-actor adapts their actions for their partner ( Ray et al, 2017 ). Previous experience is thought to have these effects because performance of the task (generating the action and sensing and perceiving the outcomes of the action) establishes, refines, and/or strengthens the coupling between the representations of the action and the perceptual consequences of those actions ( Prinz, 1992 ; Hommel et al, 2001 ; Kunde, 2001 ; Elsner and Hommel, 2004 ; Gozli et al, 2016 ).…”