Human Frontier Science Award

Models and Experiments in Timing, Rhythm, and Entrainment

Human Frontier Science Award

We are honored and delighted to have received a research grant from the Human Frontier Science Program, an international nonprofit supporting international collaborations in cutting-edge science. We will be working with Associate Professor Dan Bang at University of Aarhus, Denmark, who will be recording dopamine levels in the human basal ganglia with sub-second resolution while neurosurgery patients listen to and move along with auditory rhythms. Our role will be to design experiments, analyze data, and explain the results with computational models. We will be looking for graduate students and postdocs very soon — stay tuned!