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- Dr. Caroline Palmer (caroline.palmer (at) mcgill.ca), Professor, Canada Research Chair in Cognitive Neuroscience of Performance, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.
- Dr. Bavo Van Kerrebroeck (bavo.vankerrebroeck (at) mail.mcgill.ca), Postdoc researcher, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.
- Dr. Andrii Smykovskyi (andrii.smykovskyi (at) mail.mcgill.ca), Postdoc fellow, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.Ìý
- Wenbo Yi (wenbo.yi (at) mail.mcgill.ca), PhD candidate, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ
- Kai Mikkelsen (kai.mikkelsen (at) mcgill.ca), MAÌýstudent, Music Technology, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.Ìý
- Catherine Lin (catherine.s.lin (at) mail.mcgill.ca), MSc student, Psychology, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.Ìý
- Mikaila Tombe (mikaila.tombe (at) mail.mcgill.ca), MSc student, Psychology, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.
- Joshua Samuels (joshua.samuels (at) mail.mcgill.ca), BASc student, Psychology, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.
- Elizabeth Harrigan (elizabeth.harrigan (at) mail.mcgill.ca), BASc student, Cognitive Science, ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ.
Dr. Caroline Palmer
Caroline Palmer's research program combines two related issues in cognitive psychology: how people remember long sequences typical of speech and music, and how they produce those sequences. Many theories of memory for speech, written language, pictures, and other human endeavors focus on the problem of serial order: knowing what comes next in a sequence. What most theories do not address is the time course of retrieval: when particular sequential (serial order) information is available, and for how long. We focus on the time course of serial order in music performance and in speech, the most complex of human skills.
See Dr. Palmer's webpage for more information (including contact information).
See selected publications.Ìý
Dr. Bavo Van Kerrebroeck
Bavo joined the SPL as a post-doc in March 2023. He is a researcher in embodied music cognition, extended reality, and human-computer interaction. He obtained a master’s in engineering and computer music at the KUleuven and Sorbonne University (IRCAM) and completed his PhD at Ghent University (IPEM). He currently works on the development of musical agents to investigate the emergent qualities in collective music making.
- Van Kerrebroeck, B., Crombé, K., de Leymarie, S. M., Leman, M., & Maes, P. J. (2024). The virtual drum circle: polyrhythmic music interactions in mixed reality.ÌýJournal of New Music Research, 1–21.Ìý
- Campo A, MichaÅ‚ko A, Van Kerrebroeck B, Stajic B, Pokric M, Leman M. (2023). The assessment of presence and performance in an AR environment for motor imitation learning: A case-study on violinists. Computers in Human Behavior.Ìý
- Rosso M, van Kerrebroeck B, Maes PJ, Leman M. Embodied perspective-taking enhances interpersonal synchronization. (2023). A body-swap study. iScience.Ìý
- Van Kerrebroeck, B., Caruso, G., & Maes, P. J. (2021). A methodological framework for assessing social presence in music interactions in virtual reality. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 663725.
- Van Kerrebroeck, B., & Maes, P. J. (2021). A breathing sonification system to reduce stress during the COVID-19 pandemic. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, 623110
Dr. Andrii Smykovskyi
Andrii joined the SPL lab as a Marie Curie postdoc in September 2024. He earned a master's in sport psychology from the National University of Physical Education and Sport of Ukraine in 2013, and a master's in Human Movement Sciences from the University of Montpellier in 2019, where he later completed his PhD in 2023. His research addresses interactional synchronization in a range of behaviors. His work in the SPL focuses on how emotions influence joint behavior from a multimodal perspective.
- Smykovskyi, A., Janaqi, S., Pla, S., Jean, P., BieÅ„kiewicz, M. M. N., & Bardy, B. G. Negative emotions disrupt intentional synchronization during group sensorimotor interaction.ÌýEmotion, 24(3), 687–702.Ìý
- Smykovskyi, A., BieÅ„kiewicz, M. M. N., Pla, S., Janaqi, S., & Bardy, B. G. Positive emotions foster spontaneous synchronisation in a group movement improvisation task.ÌýFrontiers in Human Neuroscience, 16, 944241.Ìý.
- BieÅ„kiewicz, M. M. N., Smykovskyi, A. P., Olugbade, T., Janaqi, S., Camurri, A., Bianchi-Berthouze, N., Björkman, M., Bardy, B. G. Bridging the gap between emotion and joint action.ÌýNeuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 131, 806–833.Ìý.
Wenbo Yi
Wenbo joined the SPL as a PhD student in September 2022. He studied Sound Recording at the Bachelor's and Master’s levels in China, then completed a Master’s degree in Music, Communication and Technology at the University of Oslo, Norway. Wenbo also worked at the RITMO Center of Excellence in Oslo, where his research included rhythm perception and production, linguistic rhythm, and cardiac synchrony in musical ensembles. His current research focuses on group dynamics in complex music activities.
- Høffding, S.,ÌýYi, W.​, Lippert, E., Sanchez, V. G., Bishop, L., Laeng, B., Danielsen, A., Jensenius, A. R., & Wallot, S. (2023). Into the Hive-Mind: Shared Absorption and Cardiac Interrelations in Expert and Student String Quartets.ÌýMusic & Science,Ìý6.ÌýÌý
Kai Mikkelsen
Kai joined the SPL as a technical assistant in Fall 2023. He earned a Bachelors degree in Software Engineering from the University of Victoria and is currently pursuing his Masters of Arts in Music Technology at ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ. His research interests include Digital Signal Processing and Music Information Retrieval.
Catherine LinÌý
Catherine joined the SPL as a MSc student in September 2024, after completing a Bachelor's degree from Western University with an honour's specialization in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience and a Minor in Biology. Her current research is focused on investigating tempo drift in synchronized solo and group performance of music.
Mikaila Tombe
Mikaila joined the SPL lab as a MA student in September 2024. She completed her Bachelor’s degree from Vancouver Island University with an Honours in Psychology. Mikaila is co-supervised by Dr. Caroline Palmer and Dr. Signy Sheldon in the Sheldon Memory Lab, with her current research focused on musical tempo-evoked arousal and event memories.
Joshua Samuels
Joshua is a senior undergraduate student at ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ studying Psychology with a minor in Philosophy. He joined the SPL in Fall 2024. In collaboration with Dr. Palmer and Wenbo Yi, his honours research project focuses on cardiac and respiratory synchrony measured in pairs of musicians during joint music performance.
Elizabeth Harrigan
Elizabeth joined the SPL in Fall 2023 as an undergraduate. She is completing a Bachelor’s degree in Cognitive Science with focuses on Linguistics and Computer Science. Her honours research project examines the physiological effects of group synchrony, including the relationship between musical and cardiac synchrony and effects of disrupting synchrony.