Configurations that exhibit fluid flow over twin open cavities occur fairly commonly in practical applications in the aircraft industry such as in weapons bays of modern aircraft and in landing gear wells of both commercial and military aircraft. This paper presents the results of ongoing research in the area of twin-cavity, interaction using metrics from linear and nonlinear spectral analysis techniques and linear stability analysis. The primary goal of this paper is to document the similarities between interactions occurring in twin-cavities and twin-jets. Although the phenomenon of twin-jet interaction has been researched with a fair amount of thoroughness in the past, a study of twin-cavity interaction studies have not, thus fa); been undertaken, to the best of the authors' knowledge. During the course of this study, it was found that there were marked similarities between the phenomena observed in twin-jets and twin-cavities. In particular it was found that characteristics of twin-cavity interactions such as (i), unpredictable mode switching, (ii). nonlinear interactions acting as precursors to mode switching, (iii). Difference interactions in the cross-bicoherence spectra outnumbering the stan. interactions, and (iv). nonlinear metrics showing all increase in the interactions between twin-cavities when linear metrics show a decay in the interactions, were common to both twin-jets and twin -cavities.