The Neurobiology of Coherence: How Error Closure, Linguistic Entrainment, and Inter-Brain Synchrony Converge in Social Trust

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Abstract

Human collectives flourish when minds coordinate around shared expectations—what this paper terms coherence. Contemporary neuroscience demonstrates that coherence arises through three nested mechanisms:(1) the ACC–PFC loop achieves error closure, resolving internal conflict and prediction mismatch;(2) linguistic entrainment synchronizes cortical oscillations between speakers and listeners, producing shared rhythm; and(3) inter-brain synchrony appears during cooperative behavior, reflecting cross-person prediction.Integrating hyperscanning, conflict-monitoring, and language-oscillation studies reveals that vigilance cues—threat, guilt, ambiguity—maintain amygdala and ACC activation, whereas resolution cues—trust, forgiveness, prosodic rhythm—recruit vmPFC regulation, promoting oxytocin release and cross-brain coupling. Coherence therefore represents an energy-efficient predictive-coding solution that minimizes uncertainty across agents. We outline measurable biomarkers and ethical applications for public health, digital design, and education, arguing that forgiveness and rhythmic reciprocity constitute biological prerequisites for sustainable social order.

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