| name | attachment-representations-interbrain-synchrony |
| description | Attachment representations in early childhood as independent endogenous driver of interbrain synchrony during remote cooperation. Novel Remote Partner-Belief Manipulation paradigm isolates attachment representations by manipulating partner-belief. EEG synchrony concentrated at P4 channel (right TPJ). Activation: attachment, interbrain synchrony, EEG hyperscanning, child-adult interaction, attachment representations, social neuroscience, partner-belief manipulation, early childhood, mother-child interaction, brain synchronization, attachment security, social-emotional development. |
| metadata | {"arxiv_id":"2606.03700","authors":"Wang et al.","categories":"q-bio.NC, psychology","published":"2026-06-03","keywords":["attachment representations","interbrain synchrony","EEG hyperscanning","child-adult interaction","remote cooperation","partner-belief manipulation","early childhood","mother-child relationship","social neuroscience","right temporoparietal junction"]} |
Summary
This paper establishes attachment representations as an independent, endogenous driver of interbrain synchrony in early childhood (3-4 years), using a novel experimental paradigm that isolates internal representations from actual social interaction.
Key Innovation: Remote Partner-Belief Manipulation paradigm experimentally manipulates children's belief about their interaction partner (mother vs. stranger) while the actual partner remains constant, isolating attachment representations from partner-specific factors.
Experimental Paradigm
Remote Partner-Belief Manipulation
Setup: 40 child-mother-stranger trios performing remote cooperation task
Manipulation: Children were told they were interacting with their mother, but actual partner could be stranger:
- Partner-belief conditions: Mother-partner belief vs. Stranger-partner belief
- Actual partner conditions: Mother vs. Stranger
- Independent variable: Belief manipulation (internal representation)
- Control: Actual partner identity
Key Finding: Children's mother-partner belief (regardless of actual partner) significantly enhanced interbrain synchrony, demonstrating that attachment representations drive synchrony independently of actual social cues.
EEG Hyperscanning Protocol
Measurement: Dual-EEG recording from child and adult partners during remote cooperation
Analysis:
- Interbrain synchrony computed between partners
- Channel-specific analysis (P4 focus)
- Correlation with attachment security measures
- Behavioral response acceleration analysis
Key Findings
1. Attachment Representations Drive Synchrony
Mother-partner belief effect:
- Enhanced interbrain synchrony regardless of actual partner
- Effect concentrated at children's P4 channel (right temporoparietal junction)
- Synchrony strength correlated with:
- Attachment security scores
- Children's response acceleration due to mother-partner belief
Interpretation: Attachment representations act as endogenous driver of interbrain synchrony, independent of external social cues.
2. Spatial Localization: Right TPJ
P4 channel significance:
- Overlaying attachment-designated right temporoparietal junction (TPJ)
- TPJ known for:
- Attachment-related processing
- Mentalizing/social cognition
- Perspective-taking
- Self-other distinction
Mechanistic hypothesis: Mother-partner belief activates attachment representations → heightened attention toward attachment figure → enhanced interbrain synchrony via symbolic attachment activation during separation.
3. Behavioral Correlates
Response acceleration:
- Children with mother-partner belief showed faster responses
- Acceleration magnitude correlated with:
- Interbrain synchrony strength
- Attachment security measures
Functional significance: Attachment representations not only drive neural synchrony but also modulate behavioral timing in cooperation.
Theoretical Implications
1. Attachment Representations as Endogenous Process
Challenge to traditional view: Attachment traditionally studied as response to caregiver presence/behavior.
Novel insight: Attachment representations are:
- Endogenous (internally generated)
- Enduring (persist across separation)
- Symbolically activated (triggered by belief, not presence)
- Partner-specific (mother representation unique from stranger)
2. Neurodevelopmental Mechanism
Early childhood specificity: Study focuses on 3-4 year olds:
- Critical period for attachment consolidation
- Internal representations becoming stable
- Neurobiological substrates (TPJ) developing
Developmental trajectory: Attachment representations shape:
- Social-emotional functioning
- Neurodevelopment
- Interbrain synchrony patterns
- Cooperative behavior
3. Symbolic Attachment Activation
Mechanism proposed: When physical separation occurs:
- Symbolic attachment activation maintains attachment processes
- Belief about partner triggers attachment representations
- Heightened attention toward attachment figure
- Enhanced neural synchrony with partner
Clinical relevance: Symbolic attachment activation may explain:
- Separation anxiety neurobiology
- Attachment-based therapeutic mechanisms
- Social-emotional regulation during absence
Experimental Methodology
EEG Hyperscanning Analysis
Synchrony metrics:
- Phase synchronization
- Amplitude coupling
- Channel-specific analysis
- Time-resolved decoding
Partner-belief modulation quantification:
- Synchrony strength comparison (mother-belief vs. stranger-belief)
- Actual partner identity as control
- Correlation with attachment measures
Behavioral Measures
Response timing:
- Reaction time analysis
- Acceleration under mother-partner belief
- Cooperation performance metrics
Attachment assessment:
- Attachment security scales
- Behavioral attachment indicators
- Parent-child relationship quality
Practical Applications
1. Clinical Assessment
Diagnostic potential:
- Interbrain synchrony as attachment representation biomarker
- P4 channel activity as attachment security indicator
- Partner-belief manipulation as assessment tool
Clinical populations:
- Attachment disorders
- Autism spectrum (social synchrony deficits)
- Early childhood trauma
- Separation anxiety
2. Therapeutic Interventions
Attachment-based therapy:
- Symbolic attachment activation mechanisms
- Remote cooperation tasks for attachment enhancement
- Belief manipulation for therapeutic engagement
Parent-child interventions:
- Understanding interbrain synchrony mechanisms
- Optimizing attachment representation activation
- Enhancing social-emotional development
3. Social Neuroscience Research
Methodological innovation:
- Remote Partner-Belief Manipulation paradigm
- Experimental isolation of internal representations
- EEG hyperscanning with belief manipulation
Extensions:
- Other social representations (friendship, authority, trust)
- Cross-cultural attachment patterns
- Developmental trajectories
- Adult attachment representations
Cross-Domain Connections
Neuroscience
TPJ function: Right TPJ role in:
- Attachment processing
- Mentalizing
- Self-other distinction
- Social cognition
Interbrain synchrony: Neural mechanisms of:
- Social coordination
- Joint attention
- Cooperative behavior
- Attachment bonding
Psychology
Attachment theory: Internal representations:
- Bowlby's internal working models
- Enduring cognitive structures
- Symbolic activation mechanisms
- Partner-specific representations
Social-emotional development: Early childhood:
- Attachment consolidation
- Neurobiological maturation
- Social cognition emergence
- Behavioral regulation
Methodology
Experimental design: Novel paradigm:
- Belief manipulation independent of actual stimulus
- Isolation of internal representations
- Dual-EEG hyperscanning
- Behavioral-neural correlation
Hyperscanning: Dual-brain recording:
- Interbrain synchrony computation
- Channel-specific analysis
- Time-resolved coupling
- Behavioral correlates
Technical Details
Participant Recruitment
Sample: 40 child-mother-stranger trios
- Children: 3-4 years old
- Mothers: Primary caregivers
- Strangers: Unknown adults
Screening:
- Attachment security assessment
- Developmental milestones
- Parent-child relationship quality
Task Design
Remote cooperation:
- Child and adult perform cooperative task
- Physical separation (remote interaction)
- Belief manipulation about partner identity
- Behavioral response recording
Belief manipulation protocol:
- Children told partner is mother/stranger
- Actual partner may differ from belief
- Task performance measured
- EEG recorded simultaneously
EEG Acquisition
Recording parameters:
- Dual-EEG setup
- Standard montage
- High temporal resolution
- Motion artifact control
Analysis pipeline:
- Preprocessing (filtering, artifact removal)
- Interbrain synchrony computation
- Channel-specific analysis
- Statistical testing
Limitations & Future Directions
Sample Size
Current: 40 trios (moderate sample)
Future needs:
- Larger sample for generalizability
- Cross-cultural replication
- Longitudinal developmental trajectories
- Clinical population comparisons
Age Range
Current: 3-4 years only
Extensions needed:
- Infancy (attachment formation)
- Middle childhood (representation consolidation)
- Adolescence (attachment reorganization)
- Adults (attachment representations)
Partner Types
Current: Mother vs. Stranger
Future extensions:
- Father representations
- Sibling attachments
- Teacher/caregiver relationships
- Peer friendships
Behavioral Tasks
Current: Remote cooperation
Additional paradigms:
- Emotional communication
- Problem-solving
- Play interactions
- Separation-reunion
Related Skills
- [[interbrain-synchrony-social-cognition]] - General interbrain synchrony mechanisms
- [[attachment-theory-neurobiology]] - Attachment neurobiological foundations
- [[eeg-hyperscanning-methodology]] - Dual-EEG recording protocols
- [[social-neuroscience-child-development]] - Developmental social neuroscience
- [[tpj-social-cognition]] - Right TPJ function in social processing
References
- Bowlby, J. (1969). Attachment and loss: Vol. 1. Attachment. Basic Books.
- Feldman, R. (2012). Parent-infant synchrony: A biobehavioral model of mutual influences. Child Development.
- Dumas, G., et al. (2010). Inter-brain synchronization during social interaction. PLoS ONE.
- Saxe, R., & Kanwisher, N. (2003). People thinking about thinking people: The role of the temporoparietal junction in theory of mind. NeuroImage.
Activation Keywords
attachment, interbrain synchrony, EEG hyperscanning, child-adult interaction, attachment representations, partner-belief manipulation, early childhood, mother-child, brain synchronization, attachment security, social-emotional development, right TPJ, P4 channel, social neuroscience, developmental neuroscience