成人VR视频

Welcome to the Sequence Production Lab

Sequence Production Lab

Person with EEG headcap plays a piano听听听 A woman plays clarinet


Health Application: The World Health Organization suggests that people hum a familiar tune, 鈥淗appy Birthday to you鈥 as they wash their hands, so that the song lasts the right amount of time for the hand-washing to protect against infection. This example shows how music and other rhythms can guide important actions, such as how auditory warning signals tell听us how quickly听to cross the street.


The Sequence Production Lab at 成人VR视频, headed by Dr. Caroline Palmer, investigates the behavioural and neural foundations (learning, memory, motor control, attention) that make it possible for people to produce auditory sequences, such as playing a musical instrument or speaking. Our research focuses on the cognitive and motor changes that occur as people coordinate their actions with others. We compare beginners, experts, and disordered populations, to determine how sensory feedback is linked to the movements that produce speech or music. How does the brain combine the "what" and "when" with the "how" to produce sound? Our research addresses these issues with several laboratory techniques.

Nous 茅tudions les bases cognitives (apprentissage, m茅moire, contr么le moteur, attention) qui permettent de produire des s茅quences auditives comme la parole et la musique. Notre recherche se concentre sur les changements cognitifs et moteurs qui surviennent lorsque les gens coordonnent leurs propres actions avec les autres. Nous comparons des d茅butants, des experts et des populations sp茅ciales (pathologies) afin de d茅terminer comment les retroactions sensorielles sont associ茅s aux mouvements produisant la parole et la musique. Comment le cerveau combine-t-il le "quoi" et "quand" avec le "comment" pour pouvoir produire du son?

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