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On natural attunement: Shared rhythms between the brain and the environment

Efrosini Charalambous, Zakaria Djebbara

2023Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews40 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Rhythms exist both in the embodied brain and the built environment. Becoming attuned to the rhythms of the environment, such as repetitive columns, can greatly affect perception. Here, we explore how the built environment affects human cognition and behavior through the concept of natural attunement, often resulting from the coordination of a person's sensory and motor systems with the rhythmic elements of the environment. We argue that the built environment should not be reduced to mere states, representations, and single variables but instead be considered a bundle of highly related continuous signals with which we can resonate. Resonance and entrainment are dynamic processes observed when intrinsic frequencies of the oscillatory brain are influenced by the oscillations of an external signal. This allows visual rhythmic stimulations of the environment to affect the brain and body through neural entrainment, cross-frequency coupling, and phase resetting. We review how real-world architectural settings can affect neural dynamics, cognitive processes, and behavior in people, suggesting the crucial role of everyday rhythms in the brain-body-environment relationship.

Topics & Concepts

AttunementEntrainment (biomusicology)RhythmEmbodied cognitionPsychologyPerceptionSensory systemCognitionAffect (linguistics)Cognitive psychologyNatural (archaeology)NeuroscienceCommunicationComputer sciencePhysicsBiologyArtificial intelligenceAcousticsMedicineAlternative medicinePaleontologyPathologyNeural dynamics and brain functionMultisensory perception and integrationVisual perception and processing mechanisms
On natural attunement: Shared rhythms between the brain and the environment | Litcius