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Tracing the invisible: Quantifying mirroring and embodied attunement in dyadic and triadic Dance Movement Therapy

MAKRIS, S.; Langley, B.; Page, R.; Perris, E.; Karkou, V.; Cazzato, V.

2026-03-07 neuroscience
10.64898/2026.03.05.707373 bioRxiv
Show abstract

BackgroundMirroring is a foundational method used in Dance Movement Therapy (DMT), assumed to foster empathy and therapeutic attunement, yet its embodied dynamics remain insufficiently studied. In this paper, we provide the first quantitative exploration of client-therapist mirroring across dyadic and triadic formats, examining how synchrony unfolded during a structured mirroring exercise in which participants alternated between leading and following roles. MethodologyUsing optical motion capture and time-series modelling, we quantified movement coordination in dyadic (female client-therapist; male client-therapist) and triadic (therapist with both clients) interactions. ResultsIn dyadic tasks, the female client-therapist interaction was marked by tight temporal alignment, significant synchrony, robust predictive accuracy, and clear client-to-therapist influence, consistent with kinaesthetic empathy and affect-sensitive entrainment. By contrast, the male client-therapist dyad exhibited weaker and more delayed temporal coupling, alongside reduced phase synchronisation and fewer directional dependencies, despite comparable levels of interpersonal proximity. In the triadic task, temporal entrainment attenuated: therapist movement had few matching qualities to clients movement, yet recurrent synchrony with both clients persisted, suggesting a strategic shift from fine-grained entrainment to stable postural scaffolding under divided attention. DiscussionThese findings demonstrated that mirroring is not a uniform technique, but a family of embodied coordination modes flexibly recruited according to relational context and client expressivity. They align with theories of embodied simulation and affect attunement, implicating rapid motor resonance in dyadic entrainment and interoceptive-affective scaffolding in triadic stability. Clinically, the results underscore the need for training in flexible embodied strategies, split attention, and equitable allocation of attunement in group work. More broadly, they open a translational agenda linking kinematic synchrony to neural, interoceptive, and autonomic mechanisms, positioning mirroring as both an experiential hallmark and a measurable mechanism of change in embodied psychotherapy.

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