Keith Wheeles

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The cerebellum has traditionally been thought of as that part of the brain that guides movement. Most movements made by most animals have a repetitive, oscillatory quality. When we walk or run, we tend to do so at a more or less constant pace; our body settles into a gait and we maintain it. When fish swim or birds fly, they tend to flip their fins or flap their wings at a more or less constant rate. The cerebellum is involved in maintaining this rate, or gait. One of the hallmarks of Parkinson’s disease is difficulty walking, and we now know that cerebellar degeneration accompanies this ...more
This Is Your Brain on Music: The Science of a Human Obsession
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