“…Group activities can enhance this synchrony during intense social states, body or speech coordination, music production, dancing, student-teacher interactions in classrooms, touch-mediated pain reduction, creativity in cooperative tasks, and even in socially interacting bats ( Lindenberger et al, 2009 ; Dumas et al, 2010 ; Sanger et al, 2012 ; Yun et al, 2012 ; Kawasaki et al, 2013 ; Dikker et al, 2017 ; Goldstein et al, 2018 ; Poikonen et al, 2018 ; Lu et al, 2019 ; Zhang and Yartsev, 2019 ). Importantly, teams exhibit higher interbrain synchrony compared with solo performers ( Reinero et al, 2021 ). We posit that interbrain synchrony can be a metric for more effective group interactions.…”