This project is part of the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) project,
The Rhythm of Relating: How Emotional Sharing Emerges from Interpersonal Synchrony in Movements, Physiology, and Neural Activations. When people engage in emotional sharing, they often display the same rhythms in movements, heart rate, and brain activity. The project will investigate how such synchronous rhythms contribute to interpersonal emotion, using complex statistical analyses (i.e., analysing EEG data, time-frequency analysis, autoregressive modelling). The project entails both experimental research and research in psychotherapy settings. The results may help to make psychotherapy more effective and improve communication, for instance, in close relationships or during negotiations
The project is organised into three sub-projects, each to be carried out by one PhD student. The three PhD students will work together during data collection. At the same time, each PhD student will be responsible for their own sub-project.
- The first PhD student will focus on movement synchrony. This PhD student will be supervised by Sander Koole (VU Amsterdam), Peter Beek (VU), John Stins (VU), Tom Wilderjans (VU/Leiden University/Leuven University), and Wolfgang Tschacher (University of Bern).
- The second PhD student will focus on physiological synchrony, particularly cardiovascular responses. This PhD student will be supervised by Sander Koole (VU Amsterdam), Tom Wilderjans (VU/Leiden University/Leuven University), Wolfgang Tschacher (University of Bern), and Emily Butler (University of Arizona).
- The third PhD student will focus on brain-to-brain synchrony, using EEG hyperscanning. This PhD student will be supervised by Sander Koole (VU Amsterdam), Suzanne Dikker (New York University/VU), and Tom Wilderjans (VU/Leiden University/Leuven University).
Duration of the PhD project is four years. The PhD candidate will participate in the meetings of the Amsterdam Emotion Regulation Lab and the Graduate School of the Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences. The PhD candidate will be based in Amsterdam; however, the position requires intermittent domestic and international travel to attend conferences, training events, and for psychotherapy data collection, which will take place at the VU Amsterdam and Tel Aviv University (under supervision of Dr. Dana Atzil-Slonim).
Your duties
- Designing and performing experiments (all steps from recruiting participants to collecting data, including statistical analysis) regarding brain synchrony using portable EEG scanners
- Complex statistical analysis of to investigate patterns of interpersonal synchronisation.
- Analysis of data from either movement scanners (for the Movement science PhD student), cardiological measures (for the Physiology PhD student), or portable EEG scanners (for the Neuroscience PhD student)
- Collecting data in psychotherapy settings in Amsterdam and Tel Aviv.
- Complete a coherent series of journal articles in English, which culminate in a dissertation, and publish the articles in leading international journals in the field
- Work in team with two additional PhD students and international experts from the Amsterdam Emotion Regulation Lab.
- Engage in social media and popular communication about the research results
- Attending and presenting at international conferences
- Taking part in Graduate School of the Faculty of Behavioural and Movement Sciences which involves training in such relevant topics as research methods, statistics, writing and presenting.
Each PhD student will make a limited contribution each year to the Department’s teaching programme (such as leading a student workgroup, co-supervising a Master student’s thesis project, or co-teaching a lecture). There is the opportunity to obtain a basic qualification teaching certificate (shortened BKO). However, the primary focus will be on research.