Group of advisors

Our group of advisors

This project would not be possible without the guidance and advice of many others. Find out who else is helping us along the way.​

Chair Manager

I am a behavioural neuroscientist, musician and sound designer with a special interest in how our experiences help shape our sensory and motor systems. My research focuses on the science that underpins performance in all its forms. Some of my work focuses on creating immersive auditory and multisensory experiences for audiences in live and virtual environments. Other work explores how to improve training methods for health professionals and athletes. My lab also studies how we evaluate performance, particularly in high-stakes environments. The ‘big picture’ questions driving my work are how learning, practice and experience change the way that information flows between different areas of the brain, and how information is used to control movement.

I hold academic appointments as an Associate Professor in McMaster University’s Department of Surgery, with additional appointments in the Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, the Schools of Biomedical Engineering and Computational Science and Engineering, the Health Science Education program and the School of the Arts at McMaster. I am also a Faculty Affiliate of the Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence, and hold a status-only appointment in the Department of Surgery at the University of Toronto.

Market Strategist

Frank Russo is a Professor of Psychology and Senior Research Chair at Ryerson University. He also holds status appointments in Rehabilitation Science and Music at the University of Toronto, and as an affiliate scientist at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute. In his Science of Music Auditory Research and Technology (SMART) Lab at Ryerson, he studies the biological, cognitive, and social-emotional bases of music and speech. He also engages in two related areas of applied research. The first area seeks to understand perception of listening effort, music, and speech emotion in hearing impaired older adults. The second area assesses the potential for music-based interventions (especially singing) to contribute to health, communication and wellbeing. He is committed to the dissemination and translation of research beyond the academy through creative collaborations with community-based groups and industry. Successful translations of his research include a Canadian train-horn standard, a sensory substitution technology, new algorithms to support music perception through hearing aids, and the development of singing interventions to support communication deficits. He is a Fellow of the Canadian Psychological Association and Massey College, and is a past president of the Canadian Acoustical Association.

Real Estate Agent

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Real Estate Agent

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Real Estate Agent

Duis sed odio sit amet nibh vulputate cursus a sit amet mauris. Morbi accumsan ipsum velit. Nam nec tellus a odio.

Real Estate Agent

Duis sed odio sit amet nibh vulputate cursus a sit amet mauris. Morbi accumsan ipsum velit. Nam nec tellus a odio.