“…Although behavioral synchrony underlies many forms of social interaction, its development has been studied primarily during stationary, face‐to‐face interactions between infants and caregivers or other adults (Cohn & Tronick, 1987; Cuadros, Hurtado, & Cornejo, 2019; Kaye & Fogel, 1980; López Pérez et al, 2017; Stern, 1971, 1974). While held in their mother’s arms or seated across from one another, pre‐mobile infants and their caregivers spontaneously engage in a sequence of contingent facial expressions and vocalizations that researchers have referred to as a social “dance” (Bernieri et al, 1988; Feldman, 2007; Harrist & Waugh, 2002; Jaffe, Beebe, Feldstein, Crown, & Jasnow, 2001; Provenzi, Scotto di Minico, Giusti, Guida, & Müller, 2018; Stern, 1997; Yale, Messinger, Cobo‐Lewis, & Delgado, 2003).…”