Collaboration on Motor Planning, Execution and Resilience (COMPERE)
To understand movement – how it is learned, how it is executed, and why it fails after injury or disease – we must understand neural input to muscles, which are ultimately responsible for all motor actions like reaching, running, and speaking. We aim to shed new light on real-world movement by openly developing and collaboratively using technologies that measure muscle activity at unprecedented resolution and scale. This collaborative network is generously supported by the Azrieli Foundation.
COMPERE is seeking partners to further develop and use our electrode technology to achieve fundamental advances in sensorimotor neuroscience in both research and clinical settings.