Researcher of the Month
September 2014
Jay Loomis 
Music major, Class of 2015
Angela & Dexter Bailey - URECA Summer 2014 Award recipient 
Research Mentor: Dr. Margaret Schedel, Dr. Daniel Weymouth, Music; Dr. Lisa Muratori, Dr. Erin Vasudevan,
                           Physical Therapy 
 This spring, Jay Loomis was selected from the pool of talented URECA summer applicants to receive the inaugural Angela and Dexter Bailey – URECA award to support his research over the summer. Jay’s project is on “Real-Time Auditory Feedback for Persons with Parkinson’s Disease: Overcoming Akinesia
                        with Music” — an interdisciplinary project involving Prof. Margaret Schedel, Prof. Daniel Weymouth of
                     the Department of Musicand the Consortium for Digital Arts, Culture and Technology
                     (cDACT); and Prof. Lisa Muratori, Prof. Erin Vasudevan, and Peter Marcote of the Physical
                     Therapy Department.
This spring, Jay Loomis was selected from the pool of talented URECA summer applicants to receive the inaugural Angela and Dexter Bailey – URECA award to support his research over the summer. Jay’s project is on “Real-Time Auditory Feedback for Persons with Parkinson’s Disease: Overcoming Akinesia
                        with Music” — an interdisciplinary project involving Prof. Margaret Schedel, Prof. Daniel Weymouth of
                     the Department of Musicand the Consortium for Digital Arts, Culture and Technology
                     (cDACT); and Prof. Lisa Muratori, Prof. Erin Vasudevan, and Peter Marcote of the Physical
                     Therapy Department.
The goal of the project is to use sonification to develop individual auditory cues
                     based on gait specific motion analysis data – and to use the information in a biofeedback
                     system so that individuals with Parkinson’s Disease (PD) can use external sound cues
                     to self-correct impaired gait patterns. As part of the preparation for the clinical
                     test phase which will begin this fall, Jay became very familiar with the Lemur app
                     for iPad to design the user interface – and with MAX-MSP software to collect numerical
                     data from the iPad. The team presented their initial research on the interdisciplinary
                     project as a poster at the Music, Mind, Meaning Conference at John Hopkins University
                     this past January; and Jay also presented a poster at URECA’s campus-wide symposium last
                     April.
Currently a music major at SB, Jay came to the project already with a broad array
                     of talents and experiences in hand. His first bachelor’s degree was from Wheaton College,
                     IL where he graduated cum laude with a bachelor’s in Interdisciplinary Studies in 1997. Subsequently between 2000-2008,
                     Jay taught English in Madrid, Spain; Mexico City, Mexico; and Xi' An, China. Jay became
                     seriously involved with music in the early 2000s, when he lived in Madrid and would
                     listen to Irish musicians play in a pub. He took up the bodhrán, as well as the flute;
                     he also started to collect flutes and wind instruments from different parts of the
                     world. Since coming to SB, Jay has been involved with SB theater productions (MacBath,
                     Timon of Athens, Hamlet); Parrish Art Museum openings; and numerous music performances
                     (e.g. jazz combo concerts, SB Composers concert, sonic spring electronic music concert).
                     He is the recipient of the Arthur Lambert Memorial Scholarship for a music student.
                     Last fall, Jay co-performed and presented alongside Tim Vallier a composition called
                     “Limbic Hemispheres”at the TEDxSBU conference. Jay has also worked as an arts and crafts coordinator at Camp De Wolfe in Wading
                     River; as an Events coordinator at the Craft Center at SB; and recently interned/volunteered
                     at the SBU Freedom School in Summers 2013 and 2014. From 2009 to the present, Jay
                     also worked part-time as a care provider at an AHRC group home for adults with developmental
                     disabilities (including motion and movement disabilities), an experience which prepared
                     him well for the current research project. 
With wide-ranging interests in sonification, music therapy, ethnomusicology, jazz,
                     and instrument construction, Jay currently plans to apply for PhD programs in musicology
                     or ethnomusicology.Below are excerpts of his conversation with Karen Kernan, URECA Director.
Karen. What was your URECA project this past summer?
Jay.  This summer, we worked on developing an experiment so that we can determine if people
                     with Parkinson’s disease (PD) can effectively hear differences in sounds—particularly
                     distorted sounds — and then use external cues (sound) to help correct their gait.
                     We designed an experiment where participants use sliders on an iPad to change the
                     amount of distortion they hear while listening to music (Jazz, Bluegrass, Classical,
                     Pop, Rock, Country, Electronic). Our premise is that if people with PD can hear the
                     distortion and correct it by using sliders, then they will also be able to hear the
                     distorted sound as an indication of an abnormality in their gait and correct it by
                     changing the way they are walking. We are nearly ready to do clinical trials with
                     50 participants.
That sounds ambitious. What are some of the challenges in your work?
We had to figure out how we can make a linear slider on an iPad imitate a non-linear
                     action (a problem with gait). We used the Lemur app for iPad so that the participants
                     can change the amount of distortion that they hear while listening to music. The distorted
                     sound would increase, or decrease, or plateau or disappear altogether depending on
                     where the participants were moving their fingers with the slider. Figuring out how
                     to design the user interface to imitate a person whose gait was getting skewed wasn’t
                     easy — but we did it. The next step after that will be developing testing using external
                     cues for PD patients who are walking on a treadmill.
Have you started the clinical/testing phase of the project?
That’s what we want to do this semester. This past summer we focused on developing
                     the test. We have tests where we have different music, and different ways to distort
                     the music. We can make it sound muffled, really echoey…or we can make it sound staticy-
                     or we can also make it sound like a record player that is skipping. Each one of these
                     different sonic/auditory distortions would be used to indicate a different problem
                     that PD patients can have while they’re walking. We have the tests prepared and now
                     we need to see if people with PD can hear the distortions as well as we can. It will
                     be exciting to start the testing – hopefully it will go as smoothly as we anticipate.
I really wanted to test patients this summer — but in 10 weeks it’s hard to accomplish
                     everything you set out to do. I had to shift my expectations but also see that the
                     experimentation that we developed this summer is an essential step to make the difference
                     in the overall project.  I learned that we need to go step by step.  I guess that patience and perseverance
                     is one of the big things I learned this summer.
How did you first become involved with the project?
My advisor for this project is Prof. Margaret Schedel – and she does a lot with sound
                     and technology (she’s also a composer). I first learned about this project from Tim
                     Vallier, a graduate student in the Music Department. He told me about how they were
                     using sound, motion detectors, to help people with PD improve their gait. Right away
                     I asked Dr. Schedel if I could be involved, because I thought it sounded really interesting…
                     I started reading up on the project, having conversations and then went over the lab
                     – and Dr. Schedel introduced me to Dr. Muratori who runs the Physical Therapy part
                     of the project. This was ~ 3 semesters ago.   And I have really loved being part of
                     this team. It was exciting to see these different perspectives (from Music, from Physical
                     Therapy) come together. 
We met regularly – the whole team--throughout the summer, and at each meeting we set
                     a goal and we met it. And if we didn’t meet it, we figured out how to fix it. The
                     cooperation, the interaction, the rapport – it has all been really great. I liked
                     seeing how a project like this one can bring departments together, and how music can
                     coordinate with the health sciences to improve the quality of life of people with
                     mental and physical disabilities.
What was one of the most surprising things you’ve learned?
I’m definitely more of a musician than a scientist. So I was surprised to find out
                     how important one line of data can be in terms of measuring the progress that a person
                     can make while they’re correcting the distorted sound. I remember that at one point
                     when we were collecting numbers to measure where you move the slider, I thought the
                     numbers we had would be enough. But I learned that “No, we need the x and y axis number”….and
                     why these additional numbers were important. It was good for me to see that the scientific
                     mind was different than the musical mind. And that together we could come to an understanding
                     of how the project would work.
Scientists know how to talk to scientists. And musicians know how to talk to musicians.
                     And sometimes, even though we have common vocabularies and there are obviously areas
                     of overlap, it would take a little extra explaining to figure out the different perspectives
                     – from the music side, and from the physical therapy side. But we had clear goals.
                     And we knew what we wanted to accomplish. So as a whole, it worked as an educational
                     research team should work and it has been a great experience for me to be a part of
                     it.
Is it difficult to balance research and classes? 
Yes, it is. Which is why the summer was awesome. The Bailey-URECA grant was super
                     helpful. I didn’t have to work any of my part time jobs which was great. During the
                     semesters, I work at AHRC part time. I also work here on campus in the Craft Center.
                     Sometimes I do some tutoring in Spanish. ( I’m fluent in Spanish, I lived in Spain
                     for several years.)…but I didn’t’ have to do any of that this summer. I could just
                     focus on this project. It takes a lot of time- the reading, the research, the meetings,
                     the preparation. And I had a big learning curve with one program, MaxMSP, an audio-processing
                     program that I needed to use for the project. I really needed the time this summer
                     to really focus on learning all these programs. 
Now that classes have started again, it's very busy.... I have a full load, with two
                     graduate classes and I’m also curating a show at the SAC Gallery this semester. My
                     part time jobs have come back as well… It was a dream having that time over the summer,
                     and the support of the Bailey award, to get further along in the project. 
What are your future plans? 
A PhD in Musicology – or ethnomusicology. I’ve travelled a lot. I taught English in
                     Spain, and Mexico, and China after my first degree. I’m very interested in other cultures
                     and music from other cultures, just different ways that people approach education,
                     music, art– and science too.
Did you foresee having the kind of involvement in an interdisciplinary project when
                        you first came to SB? 
Not at all –but this is something I’ve wanted to do for a long time. I worked at the
                     AHRC 6 years or so. And to think that from music together with science and physical
                     therapy – that we could create a project that some of these people I know personally
                     could benefit from is really exciting.
I decided long ago not to go into medicine, but I have always had one ear/eye in the
                     world of medicine. And I do like to approach the sciences through the arts. Even before
                     I enrolled here, I had been to SB plenty of times with my great uncle who had health
                     problems. We’d go to SB, to the hospital – and it was kind of cool coming back to
                     SB as a student, and being a part of the scientific medical world over here. And then
                     I worked at AHRC and spent a lot of time with people with physical and mental disabilities
                     and had great contact with people who could benefit from something like this. I didn’t
                     expect to be involved in a project like this but when the opportunity came up, I definitely
                     wanted to do it!
