Developmental trajectory of interpersonal motor alignment: positive social effects and link to social cognition
Autor
Rauchbauer, Birgit
Grosbras, Marie-Helene
Institución
Resumen
Interpersonal motor alignment is a ubiquitous behavior in daily social life. It is a building block
for higher social cognition, including empathy and mentalizing and promotes positive social
effects. It can be observed as mimicry, synchrony and automatic imitation, to name a few. These phenomena rely on motor resonance processes, i.e., a direct link between the perception of an
action and its execution. While a considerable literature debates its underlying mechanisms and
measurement methods, the question of how motor alignment comes about and changes in
ontogeny all the way until adulthood, is rarely discussed specifically. In this review we will
focus on the link between interpersonal motor alignment, positive social effects and social
cognition in infants, children, and adolescents demonstrating that this link is present early on in
development. Yet, in reviewing the existing literature pertaining to social psychology and
developmental social cognitive neuroscience, we identify a knowledge gap regarding the healthy
developmental changes in interpersonal motor alignment especially in adolescence