
| Location | Amsterdam School of Communication Research |
|---|---|
| Scientific fields | Behaviour and Society |
| Function types | PhD positions |
| Education | University Graduate |
| Hours | 38.0 hours per week |
| End procedure | 12 September 2010 |
| Job number | 2010-11 |
| Translations | en zh |
‘Varieties and determinants of absorption in narrative film'
Film viewers typically exhibit high degrees of absorption in the film's story world including events and characters. As yet there is no satisfactory definition of what state of mind absorption in film viewing exactly is and what factors account for it. The project aims at obtaining an understanding of the experiential states involved and their determinants with an emphasis on stimulus factors. To this end, firstly questionnaires for a variety of absorption-like states will be validated. Validation will involve a comparison with on-line measures of cognitive and emotional processing. Secondly a set of experiments will be carried out in which test films have been manipulated on the basis of available theories of (literary and filmic) narrative styles and procedures and their effects on (reader and viewer) experiences. The experimental materials will be manufactured in collaboration with film and story authors.
The project is of a highly interdisciplinary nature. Therefore the successful candidate will need to couple knowledge of film and literary theory (or a demonstrable interest in such and comparable theories, including cognitive psychological models of media content processing and linguistic discourse processing) with some experience in psychological on-line experimentation (or a demonstrable interest in this methodology).
This PhD project is part of a larger comparative project aimed at establishing forms of absorption in reading and film viewing and their relations with aesthetic responses to literature and film. The larger project is a cooperative endeavor between Utrecht University's Institute for Research in History and Culture (OGC) and the University of Amsterdam's Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR). The project is sponsored by NWO.
The ASCoR PhD project will be supervised by Professor Ed Tan (ASCoR) and Professor Frank Kessler (Utrecht University).
The position starts on 1 November 2010 at the latest, and is initially for one year. Extension of the contract after the first year to a maximum total of three years is subject to satisfactory performance. The gross monthly salary will be in accordance with the salary scale for PhD candidates at Dutch universities, i.e. ranging from €2,042 in the first year to €2,612 in the final year.
The Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) is the largest educational and research institution in the social sciences in the Netherlands. The Faculty serves 7,500 students in numerous Bachelor's and Master's programmes in Political Science, Sociology, Anthropology, Communication Science, Psychology, Social Geography, Planning and International Development Studies, and Educational Sciences. The academic staff is employed in education as well as research. There are over 1,100 employees at the Faculty, which resides in a number of buildings in the centre of Amsterdam.
The Amsterdam School of Communication Research (ASCoR) is the research institute in Communication Science at the University of Amsterdam. It is the largest research institute of its kind in Europe and is among the largest worldwide. More than 50 senior researchers are permanently associated with ASCoR, and its English-language PhD programme has more than 35 students.
A detailed project description can be obtained from the ASCoR Secretariat by email: ascor-secr-fmg@uva.nl
Questions about the project content or about the application procedure should be addressed to the ASCoR Research Manager, Dr Maaike Prangsma, m.e.prangsma@uva.nl. If necessary, she will forward your questions to one of the researchers.
The short URL code for this job opening is: 5775
Direct link to this job www.academictransfer.com/5775
