91˿Ƶ

In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en présentiel et télétravail

Updated: Tue, 03/10/2026 - 17:14
In-person class cancellation and work-from-home / Annulation des cours en présentiel et télétravail. McGILL ALERT! Due to freezing rain all in-person classes and activities on Wednesday, March 11, will be cancelled. Staff are asked not to come to campus tomorrow unless they are required on site by their supervisor to perform necessary functions and activities. See your 91˿Ƶ email for more information.
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ALERTE McGILL! En raison de la pluie verglaçante, tous les cours et activités en présentiel prévus pour le mercredi 11 mars sont annulés. Nous demandons au personnel de ne pas se présenter sur le campus demain, à moins que leur superviseur ne leur demande d’être sur place pour accomplir des fonctions ou activités nécessaires au fonctionnement du campus. Pour plus d’informations, veuillez consulter vos courriels de 91˿Ƶ.
News

Find a partner who marches to the beat of your own drum

Group coordination is optimized between people with similar movement rates
Published: 9 February 2016

By Cynthia Lee

Newsroom

Everyone marches to the beat of their own drum: From walking to talking to producing music, different people’s movements occur at different speeds.

But do these differences influence coordination of group actions? The answer is yes, according to 91˿Ƶ researchers. The finding has the potential to help us predict for each person how successful they will be in a group task, depending on how similar their partners are to them in their internal rhythms.

”We found that pairs of musicians (pianists) with similar rates of solo music performance are better at synchronizing the timing of tone onsets during piano duets than partners with different solo performance rates,” says 91˿Ƶ psychology professor Caroline Palmer.

“We think this could extend to interpersonal synchrony in other fields, such as recreational activities like jogging, where health benefits may be greatest when partners are matched for rates; or in education, when teachers and students are matched in conversational speech rates; and especially in sports, such as tennis doubles, pairs skating or team rowing,” explains Palmer.


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Solo movement rates: stable predictor of group coordination

The 91˿Ƶ research team found that solo rates are a stable predictor of coordination between individuals. There were no group differences in other factors known to influence coordination, such as years of musical training and age at which pianists started musical training. This suggests that solo rates are the only difference in partners’ duet coordination between matched and mismatched pairs.

“These findings suggest that coordination of timing with a partner is facilitated by similarity of partners’ individual movement speeds,” says Anna Zamm, a Ph.D student at 91˿Ƶ and the study’s first author.

“Success on group tasks is linked to how well pair members match up - a bit like rowers in a boat. The boat will move straight ahead if both people are matched in the force with which they row”, explains Palmer. “It does not matter whether each individual is strong or weak - it's the match in force that matters”.

Endogenous Rhythms Influence Interpersonal Synchrony by Anna Zamm, Chelsea Wellman, Caroline Palmer will be published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance,

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