Thursday, January 15, 2009

Possible Readings: Agency and Free Will

Empirical investigations of the phenomenology of agency and free will have enjoyed new popularity over the last few years. A good place to start, for one perspective on the issues, possibilities for future research, and a useful reference list, is:

Nahmias, E., Morris, S., Nadelhoffer, T. and Turner, J. (2004). The phenomenology of free will. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 11, 162-79

For an interesting and sceptical approach to agency and our conscious experience of action, written by a social psychologist, try:

Wegner, D.M. (2002). The Illusion of Conscious Will. Cambridge, MA.: MIT Press

A more challenging read – one that serves as a good introduction to Benjamin Libet’s famous studies on the timing of conscious intentions – is the following edited volume :

Libet, B, Freeman, A., and Sutherland, K. (1999). The Volitional Brain: Towards a Neuroscience of Free Will. Thorverton: Imprint Academic.

[The journal is in the Library and accessible via the e-journal portal; the books are available in the Library]

 

Monday, January 12, 2009

Selected Readings: Music Imagery, Responses to Music, Effects of Background Music


All the readings below are either in the Wits Library (books) or available via the Library’s e-journal portal. If you have trouble accessing the journal articles, let me know, and we’ll see if we can make a plan.
General Reading:
Levitin, D. (2007). This is your brain on music. London: Atlantic.
Sacks, O. (2007). Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain. London: Picador.
Sacks, O. (2006). The power of music. Brain, 129, 2528-2532
Storr, A. (1992). Music and the mind. London: Harper Collins
You can also browse two journals, (i) Psychology of Music; and (ii) Music Perception
Music Imagery:
Brown, S. (2006). The perpetual music track: the phenomenon of constant musical imagery. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 13, 43-62
Hubbard, T. (2010). Auditory imagery: empirical findings. Psychological Bulletin, 136, 302-329.
Responses to Music:
Bicknell, J. (2007). Explaining strong emotional responses to music. Journal of Consciousness Studies, 14, 5-23.
Chamorro-Premuzic, T. & Furnham, A. (2007). Personality and music: Can traits explain how people use music in everyday life? British Journal of Psychology, 98, 175-185.
Juslin, P.N. & Sloboda, J.A. (2001). Music and Emotion: Theory and research. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Panksepp, J. & Bernatzky, G. (2002). Emotional sounds and the brain: the neuro-affective foundations of musical appreciation. Behavioural Processes, 60, 133-165.
Effects of Background Music
Jancke, L. & Sandmann, P. (2010). Music listening while you learn: No influence of background music on verbal learning. Behavioral and Brain Functions, 6 (3), 1-14

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Previously Supervised Research - A Sample of Topics

I have supervised postgraduate research in a number of areas, and using a number of different methods. I am especially keen on encouraging experimental and/or laboratory-based studies, as these tend to give students a much more hands-on feel for their research and the resulting data. Below is a representative sample of completed research projects I have supervised, with an indication of level (honours, MA), year, and an indication of method:

Effect of isolated facial feature transformations in a change blindness experiment involving a person as the object of change (MA by Dissertation - 2006) (Experimental)

Change blindness in the South African context: replicating the phenomenon (Honours - 2005) (Experimental)

Personality and the ‘chill’ effect: the relationship between personality and emotional responses to music (Honours – 2008) (Laboratory-based)

SMS text and English text: looking for a difference in processing time (Honours – 2006) (Experimental)

Defending the Freudian Unconscious (MA Research Report – 2003) (Theoretical)

Self-imposed pressure - exploring the construct (Honours – 2000) (Theoretical/ Qualitative)

The phenomenology of agency: adjudicating between Libertarian and Compatibilist accounts (Honours – 2007) (Qualitative)

Transformative grief: exploring psychological well-being in bereaved parents following the death of a child (Honours – 2005) (Qualitative)

Personality characteristics and resilience (Honours – 1999) (Correlational)

The relationship between perfectionism, gender and academic achievement in a South African undergraduate population (Honours – 2007) (Correlational)

The relationship between the Bender Visual-Motor Gestalt Test and reading achievement in the early school grades (Honours – 2008) (Correlational)

[If you would like to look at any of these projects, MA-level research is typically archived in the William Cullen Library, and honours-level research can usually be accessed via the School’s Test Library]

My Research Publications

Below is a list of my research publications in journals. These cover a range of areas, including psychoanalysis, philosophy of mind, philosophical psychopathology, clinical psychology and psychiatry, consciousness studies, cognitive science, and teaching and learning.
With the exception of the article in Alternation, all of the publications should be accessible via the Library’s e-journal portal.
Louw, F. & Pitman, M.M. (2001). Irreducible subjectivity and interactionism: a critique. International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 82, 747-766.
Pitman, M.M. (2002). Psychotherapy is Delicate Psychosurgery. South African Journal of Psychology, 32 (4), 1-8.
Pitman, M.M. (2003). Eliminative Materialism and the Integrity of Science. South African Journal of Philosophy, 22 (3), 207-219.
Pitman, M.M. (2003). Consciousness Studies: Research prospects in the ‘Cradle of Human Consciousness.’ Alternation, 10 (1), 271-291.
Israel, N., Pitman, M. & Greyling, M. (2007). Engaging critical thinking: Lessons from the RDA tutorials and projects. South African Journal of Psychology, 37 (2), 375-382.
Laher, S., Israel, N., & Pitman, M. (2007). Teaching research and statistics at undergraduate level: The RDA Tutorial Programme. South African Journal of Psychology, 37, 368-374.
I am currently in the process of completing my PhD in philosophy, titled “Free Agency and its place within Psychology”.