We are looking for two fully-funded PhD candidates for the F-AI-MILY project at the
department of Social, Health and Organisational Psychology at Utrecht University. The F-AI-MILY project, funded by an ERC Starting Grant to Dr Ruud Hortensius, aims to understand and embrace the impact of artificial agents on the social dynamics of families. How do family members trust, feel, understand, and connect with each other when living with a robot or digital voice assistant?
Your job In this project, we will take a neurocognition-at-home approach to measure distinct aspects of social dynamics. We will develop a mobile lab that combines the strengths of self-report, behavioural, and brain measures, and assess social dynamics within homes of families living with an artificial agent. We will test theoretical predictions on how living with AI influences the similarity in trust, empathy, theory of mind, and affiliation between members and how this impacts family well-being. Besides in-depth interview, questionnaire, and behavioral assessments, you will be using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) to record brain activity of all members simultaneously.
PhD project 1 focuses on the developmental aspects of changes in households’ social dynamic during long-term interactions with artificial agents. You will investigate long-term engagements with artificial agents within households with children in the age of 4 to 12. The first objective is to assess what the developmental trajectory is of the impact of artificial agents on social dynamics in the household. The second objective is to map the temporal trajectory of age-dependent changes in social dynamics.
PhD project 2 addresses the impact of artificial agents on the social dynamics of families using a multi-level approach incorporating behavioural and brain measures. Using a mobile lab setup, you will investigate how long-term interactions with robots and digital voice assistants shape distinct aspects of social dynamics (e.g., empathy, affiliation). Next, you will identify how sustainable interactions with artificial agents can provide support in households with chronic illness.
You will be part of an interdisciplinary research team supervised by
Dr Ruud Hortensius, and collaborate with researchers from family psychology, social neuroscience, and artificial intelligence, including
Professor Esther Kluwer who will serve as promotor of the PhD trajectory. You will participate in the education programme of the Kurt Lewin Institute.
The PhD projects will run for four years (90% research, 10% teaching). Your teaching tasks will be attuned to your interest and skillset and might include the supervision of Bachelor’s and Master’s theses and seminars for courses related to the topic of your project. Of course, you will be guided and supported by your supervisor and colleagues.