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NYT: ‘You Think, So You Can Dance?’ Science Is On It.

July 26, 2024 By Parkinson's Community Help

Dancers dancing amongst projections of brain stems
source: Jonathan Mehring/New York Times

Excerpt:  Over the past few decades, dance has been used as a rehabilitation tool for people with neurological disorders, tying into a long history of dance as a healing practice. (“Dance as therapy has probably existed for as long as dance has existed,” Harrison said.)  Participants in programs like Mark Morris Dance Center’s Dance for PD — which for more than 20 years has offered specialized classes for people with Parkinson’s disease — found them to be effective before science could fully explain why they worked. But dance neuroscience studies are beginning to reveal the neural mechanisms behind dance’s positive impact on motor function, cognition and mental well-being in people with a variety of neurological conditions. “Dance is joyful and mindful for everyone,” said Julia C. Basso, one of the creators of and performers in “Epiphany Machine” and the director of Virginia Tech’s Embodied Brain Laboratory. But for those whose brains are having difficulty communicating with their bodies, “it’s especially powerful.”  (The full article is behind the NYT paywall.)

NYT: ‘You Think, So You Can Dance?’ Science Is On It.

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