When one partner is stressed, the other feels it too—not just emotionally, but on a biological level. New research on heart rate synchronization helps explain how.
A study by a researcher from Waseda University has found that heart rate synchronization in response to music is highly personalized, correlating more strongly across time within the same person ...
Music-induced heart-rate synchronization depends on reliable physiological responses of the listener
In a concert, members of the audience can respond emotionally to music, owing to their biological synchronization to the audio input. However, the mechanism underlying this biological response is ...
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