Taylor Cleworth

Assistant Professor

Locations / Contact Info:

362 Norman Bethune College - BC
Keele Campus
Phone: 4167362100 Ext. 22467

Email address(es):

tclewort@yorku.ca

Faculty & School/Dept.

Faculty of Health - School of Kinesiology & Health Science

Degrees

PhD -
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada

MSc -
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada

Selected Publications

Cleworth, T. W., Perlman, C., Killingbeck, J., & Laing, A. C. (2024). Retrospective analysis of circumstances of falls and related injuries across levels of care in older adult retirement home facilities. Canadian Journal on Aging/La Revue canadienne du vieillissement, 1-7.



Lavalle, L. K., & Cleworth, T. W. (2023). The effect of modified optic flow gain on quiet stance. Neuroscience Letters797, 137068.



Cleworth, T. W., Allum, J. H., Nielsen, E. I., & Carpenter, M. G. (2023). The Effect of Roll Circular Vection on Roll Tilt Postural Responses and Roll Subjective Postural Horizontal of Healthy Normal Subjects. Brain Sciences13(11), 1502.



Nielsen, E. I., Cleworth, T. W., & Carpenter, M. G. (2022). Exploring emotional-modulation of visually evoked postural responses through virtual reality. Neuroscience Letters777, 136586.



Pasman, E. P., McKeown, M. J., Garg, S., Cleworth, T. W., Bloem, B. R., Inglis, J. T., & Carpenter, M. G. (2021). Brain connectivity during simulated balance in older adults with and without Parkinson's disease. NeuroImage: Clinical30, 102676.



Cleworth TW, Adkin AL, Allum JH, Inglis JT, Chua R & Carpenter MG. (2019). Postural threat modulates perceptions of balance-related movement during support surface rotations. Neuroscience, 404, 413-422.


Affiliations

York University Neuroscience Diploma Program

Origins of Balance Deficits and Falls
Member

Vision: Science to Applications (VISTA)
Core member

The Center for Vision Research
Faculty Member

Research Institute for Aging
Researcher

Supervision

Currently available to supervise graduate students: Yes

Currently taking on work-study students, Graduate Assistants or Volunteers: Yes

Available to supervise undergraduate thesis projects: Yes

Current Research

Understanding the relationship between neurological and biomechanical processes involved in balance control; Perception of balance-related movement; Understanding visuomotor integration during human movement and mechanisms leading to mobility deficits, including aging, physiological and psychological processes.