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New research reveals how our brains coordinate with others during dancing, highlighting the importance of shared rhythm and visual contact.
Queer friends, it's time to tug on some cowboy boots. Writer Lydia Wang never expected to get into line dancing, but the hobby is on the rise for a good reason.
Dancing fluidly with another involves social coordination. This skill entails aligning movements with others while also processing dynamic sensory information, like sounds and visuals.
Glittering between horror and euphoria Marina Zispin, the new project of noise experimentalist Martyn Reid and art pop explorer Bianca Scoutt, offers a ...
A few yards from the entrance of Prince Harry's Sentebale headquarters in Lesotho is the tiny brick house where five young ...
This week's Fogcutter column features three concerts, a sound healing at Grace Cathedral and a fancy party at the de Young ...
From celebrities to party-goers to social media influencers, even cute little girls everyone is flickin’ those fans as they join in on the “Boots on the Ground” line dance ...
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