“…Since then, fNIRS technology has advanced rapidly with newer, wearable, high-density systems developed all over the world from both large manufacturers and laboratory-developed systems including from Mexico (Gorostieta-Esperon and Jiménez-Ángeles, 2019), Japan (Kubo and Kubo, 2015), Europe (Piper et al, 2014;Pinti et al, 2015), China (Liang et al, 2016), and the U.S. (Ayaz et al, 2013;Tsow et al, 2021). Robust improvements in hardware have allowed investigation of unique domains not previously explored, such as movement-heavy activities like yoga (Dev et al, 2019;Dybvik and Steinert, 2021), unpredictable outdoor environments (McKendrick et al, 2016), and other naturalistic environments (Pinti et al, 2018), humanrobot interaction (Le et al, 2022), collaborations between two or more agents (Czeszumski et al, 2020), and in sensitive populations (Arenth et al, 2007). Because these systems remain lightweight and portable, they are ideal for non-invasive brain measurement in a number of complex real-world scenarios (Le et al, 2022).…”