Michael Barnett-Cowan
Research
Research Interests
The brain receives information about the environment from all the senses. To efficiently interact with the environment, the brain must make sense of this converging information in order to form a reliable and accurate percept with which to guide decision-making and behaviour. I am the Director of the Multisensory Brain and Cognition Lab, which seeks to determine how the brain integrates multisensory information. As a cognitive and systems neuroscientist, I investigate how multisensory processing impacts spatial and temporal perception, decision-making and human movement in real, virtual and artificial intelligence created environments. My research has helped to identify key markers of disease and test the efficacy of therapeutic and rehabilitation efforts to combat disorientation, especially in differently abled populations. My discoveries about vestibular (balance) perception have also led to practical applications in the calibration of virtual reality environments and motion simulators.
Application Areas
- Aging
- Balance/Motor Control/Biomechanics
- Fall Prevention
- Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Optometry/Vision Science
- Space
- Virtual Reality
- Wearable Devices
Technology Areas
- Biomarkers
- Computational Modelling
- Diagnostics
- Imaging
- Machine Learning/AI
- Medical Devices
- Sensors
Discipline Areas
- Biology
- Biomechanical Engineering
- Biomedical Engineering
- Computer Science
- Electrical and Computer Engineering
- Genetics
- Human Factors
- Kinesiology
- Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering
- Philosophy
- Physics
- Physiology
- Robotics
Contact Information
Groups
Links
Additional Information
[Waterloo News] September 25, 2018 "Virtual reality motion sickness may be predicted and counteracted"
[ScienceDaily] December 15, 2018 "Aging warps our perception of time, study finds"
[Record] October 12, 2017 "Aging slows perception of falls: UW study"