>It is known that interbrain activity coupling, i.e., the synchronization of neural activity between individuals, represents the neural basis of social interactions.
... Pardon, what? I can't even imagine how one would propose to study whether two groups of neurons within two different brains are "synchronized" (in what sense, even?) let alone claim it as a blunt fact.
... Pardon, what? I can't even imagine how one would propose to study whether two groups of neurons within two different brains are "synchronized" (in what sense, even?) let alone claim it as a blunt fact.