
Roles & Affiliations: Assistant Professor, Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour at McMaster University
Membership Type: Associate Member
Supervisorship Status: Available for students interested in getting involved.
If interested, please connect with Dr. Cannon.
Bio
Bio
Dr. Jonathan Cannon is an Assistant Professor in the McMaster department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour. His investigation into the human sense of rhythm (in music, speech, gait, etc.) combines computational models of neural circuits and of predictive processing in the brain with EEG and psychophysics experiments. He uses rhythm as a lens through which to study the coordination of perception and action in neurodiverse minds, with particular focus on autism and developmental stuttering.
Current Focus Areas
Current Focus Areas
Dr. Cannon’s ongoing projects include:
- an investigation of possible differences in attenuation of self-generated feedback in autism
- a set of experiments drawing links between impairments in time perception, sensorimotor synchronization, and conversational turn-taking
- a set of experiments comparing behavioural and EEG signatures of predictive motor preparation based on probabilistic cues in Autistic and neurotypical adults
Career Highlights
Career Highlights
Dr. Cannon authored a widely cited systematic review of studies investigating “prediction” in Autistic individuals (1), and helped develop a self-report measure of difficulties with prediction (2).
1. Cannon, J., O’Brien, A.M., Bungert, L. and Sinha, P. (2021), Prediction in Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review of Empirical Evidence. Autism Research, 14: 604-630. https://doi.org/10.1002/aur.2482
2. O’Brien, A.M., May, T.A., Koskey, K.L.K. et al. Development of a Self-Report Measure of Prediction in Daily Life: The Prediction-Related Experiences Questionnaire. J Autism Dev Disord 55, 2550–2565 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10803-024-06379-2
Research areas:




