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. 2016 May 25;10:242. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00242

FIGURE 2.

FIGURE 2

Representation of the experimental ‘landscape’ of the two-person neuroscience. Rearranged from Schilbach et al. (2012). The cubes represent different categories of experiment in the two-person neuroscience according to three axes: (1) data collection and analysis from 1 to 2 persons (hyperscanning); (2) participant’s engagement during the experimental task from detached to fully engaged (emotions, ecological significance, longitudinal experiment); (3) degree of interaction from passive observation, through turn-based interaction, to continuous interaction. The darkest area represents the “dark matter” of social neuroscience that has been the least explored. Music performance as a hyperscanning paradigm could help unravel this area.