Spontaneous bodily coordination varies across affective and intellectual child-adult interactions
Carlos Cornejo,
Zamara Cuadros,
David Carré
et al.
Abstract:Research on child-adult interactions has identified that the morphology of bodily coordination seems to be sensitive to age and type of interaction. Mirror-like imitation emerges earlier in life and is more common during emotionally laden interactions, while anatomical imitation is acquired later and associated with cognitive tasks. However, it remains unclear whether these morphologies also vary with age and type of interaction during spontaneous coordination. Here we report a motion capture study comparing t… Show more
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