Hello,
I am advertising to offer a fully-funded PhD studentship at Bangor University (UK/EU fees,
stipend, travel and research expenses) starting in Oct 2015, to investigate social
attributions to faces. The position would be most appropriate for someone who already has,
or is currently enrolled in, an MSc in psychology or related area. A general description
and link to the ad is below. As you can see, there is some deliberate flexibility for the
student to shape the project topic.
If you are interested, please contact me to discuss. The deadline for applications is 27
Feb.
Thank you,
Rob
Professor Robert Ward
Wolfson Centre for Clinical and Cognitive Neuroscience
School of Psychology
Bangor University
Bangor LL57 2AS
http://psychology.bangor.ac.uk/ward
http://www.bangor.ac.uk/psychology/postgraduate/studentships/human-face.php…
Humans are both highly visual and highly social beings, and people are quick to make
attributions of personality and other social traits on the basis of mere appearance. For
the past few years my students and I have been investigating the accuracy of
visually-based judgements from the face, and in a series of studies have found that these
attributions can be surprisingly accurate, even when based on neutral
"passport"-style photographs. Within such photographs is enough information to
identify stable personality traits and aspects of mental health in strangers (e.g., papers
from former PhD students: Kramer & Ward, 2010; Jones et al, 2012; Scott et al, 2013).
Such findings raise a number of issues to be explored in this studentship. A key general
issue is whether these facial cues to behaviour are part of an evolved signal system.
Theories of evolved signal systems emphasise the co-evolution of the signal sender and
receiver. For the system to remain stable, it must have benefits for both the sender and
receiver. What adaptive benefits might there be for someone to signal their socially
undesirable traits to others? Can facial signals be masked to deceive the receiver? For
example, to what extent is signal disrupted by voluntary emotional expressions? A second
general issue surrounds the signal content. That is, what is the facial information that
observers use to identify social traits? Possibilities include subtle micro-expressions,
postures, facial morphology, and more. Finally, what are the causal factors that might
produce a joint influence on facial appearance and behaviour? Within the context of these
general issues, there is scope for the student to shape the project aims and focus.
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Mae unrhyw farn neu safbwynt yn eiddo i'r sawl a'i hanfonodd yn unig ac nid yw o
anghenraid yn cynrychioli barn Prifysgol Bangor. Nid yw Prifysgol Bangor yn gwarantu bod y
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