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Science On Screen® This is what it sounds like: Prince and our perception of music Coolidge Corner Theatre (Brookline, MA): October 21, 2019 Berklee professor and frequent Prince collaborator Susan Rogers speaks about music, memory, and working with Prince. We encourage you to pair this conversation with PURPLE RAIN! Presenter: Susan Rogers is a professor of music production and engineering at Berklee College of Music. She holds a doctorate in psychology from McGill University, where she studied music cognition and psychoacoustics under researchers Daniel Levitin and Stephen McAdams. Her research focuses on auditory memory, the perception of musical signals, and the influence of musical training on auditory development. For two decades prior to her science career, Rogers was one of the world's few women known for her work as a record producer, engineer, mixer, and audio electronics technician. Career highlights include years (1983–1988) as staff engineer for recording artist Prince and working with such diverse artists as Barenaked Ladies, David Byrne, Tricky, and Tevin Campbell. Rogers is the director of the Berklee Music Perception and Cognition Laboratory. In tandem with business partner and former student Matthew McArthur '10, Rogers launched Boston's first nonprofit recording studio, The Record Company, to offer low-cost recording facilities to area musicians and free music technology instruction to area teens. — The Science on Screen grant initiative brings science to cinemas nationwide, through creative pairings of current, classic, cult, and documentary films with lively introductions by notable figures from the world of science, technology, and medicine: https://scienceonscreen.org An initiative of the Coolidge Corner Theatre, in partnership with the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation.