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Does synchronised singing enhance social bonding more than speaking does? A global experimental Stage 1 Registered Report
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Paper by Adwoa Ampiah-Bonney et al.
2025
Abstract

The evolution of music, speech, and sociality have been debated since before Darwin. The social bonding hypothesis proposes that these phenomena may be interlinked: musicality may have facilitated the evolution of social bonding beyond the possibilities of spoken language. Although dozens of experimental studies have argued that synchronised rhythms can promote bonding, methodological issues including publication bias, sample bias, experimenter effects, and appropriateness of experimental...

Authors Adwoa Ampiah-Bonney, Aleksandar Arabadjiev, Adwoa Arhine, Juan F. Ariza, Joshua Silberstein Bamford, Brenda Suyanne Barbosa, Ann-Kathrin Beck, Emmanouil Benetos, Anne Cabildo, Gakuto Chiba, Stephen Ithel Duran, Ulvhild Færøvik, Shira Gabriel, Felix Haiduk, Shantala Hegde, Ferenc Honbolygó, jiawen huang, Yannick Jadoul, Zixuan Jia, Taeyun Jung, Csaba Kertész, Uswatun Khasanah, Yoichi Kitayama, Wojciech Krzyżanowski, Urise Kuikuro, Dilyana Kurdova, Pauline Larrouy-Maestri, Teona Lomsadze, Yiqing Ma, Dayna Moya, Rogerdison Natsitsabui, Florence Ewomazino Nweke, Patricia Opondo, Yuto Ozaki, Hineatua Parkinson, Mark Lenini Parselelo, Danya Vivianne Pavlovich, Peter Pfordresher, Piotr Podlipniak, Andrea Ravignani, Dhwani P. Sadaphal, Swayambhu Ratna Shakya, Dor Shilton, Javier Silva-Zurita, Ignacio Soto-Silva, Bronwyn Tarr, Adam Tierney, Prapatsorn Tiratanti, Shahaboddin Dabaghi Varnosfaderani
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