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Intergenerational Dance Workshop

Christina Tsoules Soriano
November 29, 2017
3:00PM - 5:00PM
Sullivant Hall Room 390

Date Range
Add to Calendar 2017-11-29 15:00:00 2017-11-29 17:00:00 Intergenerational Dance Workshop Movement, Aging, Creative Technology and Well BeingGuest Researcher:Christina Tsoules SorianoDirector of Dance, Associate Professor, Wake Forest UniversityDance and Neuroscience, Dance and Aging   Norah Zuniga Shaw's Humane Technologies Discovery Theme project will be hosting Christina Soriano at Dance and The Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design (ACCAD). Soriano, an expert in dance and neuroscience and intergenerational community engagement, will share her work in a short intro talk and workshop for interested students and faculty.RSVP (first come first served)! Biography:Christina Tsoules Soriano is an associate professor and director of dance at Wake Forest University. At Wake, she regularly teaches Improvisation, Dance Composition, Modern Dance technique and a course she co-teaches with chemistry colleague Rebecca Alexander entitled Movement and the Molecular. Since 2012, Christina has regularly taught a community dance class in Winston-Salem, NC to people living with Parkinson’s Disease, and has been involved in three scientific studies that look at the ways improvisational dance can help the mobility and balance of people living with neurodegenerative disease.  She has received funding from the National Parkinson Foundation, Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC, and the NIH to conduct a randomized clinical trial, testing her improvisational dance method in a community of adults living with Mild Cognitive Impairment and their carepartners. More information about this work can be found at http://www.improvment.us/. Her published work has appeared in the Journal of Dance Education, Research in Dance Education, Dance Magazine, Theatre Journal, the Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, The Journal of Physical and Occupational Therapy in Geriatrics and Frontiers in Neurology. She is also very involved in an annual, interdisciplinary symposium: Wake Forest’s Aging Re-Imagined, which brings together the work of artists and scientists around the topic of Healthy Aging. Sullivant Hall Room 390 Department of Dance dance@osu.edu America/New_York public

Movement, Aging, Creative Technology and Well Being

Guest Researcher:
Christina Tsoules Soriano
Director of Dance, Associate Professor, Wake Forest University
Dance and Neuroscience, Dance and Aging

 

 

 

Norah Zuniga Shaw's Humane Technologies Discovery Theme project will be hosting Christina Soriano at Dance and The Advanced Computing Center for the Arts and Design (ACCAD). Soriano, an expert in dance and neuroscience and intergenerational community engagement, will share her work in a short intro talk and workshop for interested students and faculty.

RSVP (first come first served)!
 

Biography:
Christina Tsoules Soriano is an associate professor and director of dance at Wake Forest University. At Wake, she regularly teaches Improvisation, Dance Composition, Modern Dance technique and a course she co-teaches with chemistry colleague Rebecca Alexander entitled Movement and the Molecular. Since 2012, Christina has regularly taught a community dance class in Winston-Salem, NC to people living with Parkinson’s Disease, and has been involved in three scientific studies that look at the ways improvisational dance can help the mobility and balance of people living with neurodegenerative disease.  She has received funding from the National Parkinson Foundation, Blue Cross Blue Shield of NC, and the NIH to conduct a randomized clinical trial, testing her improvisational dance method in a community of adults living with Mild Cognitive Impairment and their carepartners. More information about this work can be found at http://www.improvment.us/. Her published work has appeared in the Journal of Dance Education, Research in Dance Education, Dance Magazine, Theatre Journal, the Journal of Mathematics and the Arts, The Journal of Physical and Occupational Therapy in Geriatrics and Frontiers in Neurology. She is also very involved in an annual, interdisciplinary symposium: Wake Forest’s Aging Re-Imagined, which brings together the work of artists and scientists around the topic of Healthy Aging.