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UID:event-12200@eoa.umontreal.ca
DTSTAMP:20260717T042123Z
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20220602T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20220602T124500
SUMMARY:Rhythm and predictable timing in speech (motor) disorders
LOCATION:En salle et en ligne\, 7077\, avenue du Parc\, local 3015 Montr
 éal (Québec) H3N 1X7
DESCRIPTION:Cet évènement est aussi disponible en ligne Cliquer ici pou
 r y assister\n\nAbstract: Rhythm provides predictable temporal structure 
 that helps to coordinate complex motor and cognitive functions in time. I
 n speech\, for example\, predicting rhythmic events such as accented syll
 ables or the end of phrases and turns greatly help speakers to coordinate
  their own speech with the speech of others. Recent research suggests tha
 t highly predictable rhythms such as musical or metrical rhythms have gre
 at potential to foster sensorimotor processes and facilitate speech perce
 ption and production in populations with speech and language disorders\, 
 such as dyslexia\, dysarthria\, apraxia of speech and non-fluent aphasia.
  In the present talk\, I will report on recent results and ongoing projec
 ts in my lab investigating the role of rhythm for fluent speech productio
 n in people with speech motor disorders\, and in particular\, in people w
 ho stutter. Results will also allow us to discuss how speech\, rhythmic a
 nd other musical capacities intertwine in typical and altered speech and 
 language processing.\n\nSpeaker: Simone Falk is associate professor at th
 e faculty of Arts and Sciences\, department of Linguistics and Translatio
 n\, at the University of Montreal. She holds a Canada Research Chair in I
 nterdisciplinary Studies on Rhythm and Language Acquisition. Her research
  focuses on the interface between language and music\, specifically rhyth
 mic phenomena in music and speech and rhythmic functions in communication
 \, language acquisition and speech and language pathology.\n\n&nbsp\;\n\n
 Simone Falk
URL:https://eoa.umontreal.ca/calendrier/rhythm-and-predictable-timing-in-
 speech-motor-disorders/
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