
Christopher Seemann
Please contact me directly if you wish to collaborate or discuss anything. I truly enjoying talking, but, the papers that I have posted online are very old. I have much higher quality stuff coming out soon, I hope.
In the field of non-clinical psychology, my current research focuses on the relationships between boredom and dissociation. Through my research, I hope to better characterize the state of boredom. My research utilizes personality measures, cognitive tasks and physiological measures. Personality measures are utilized as moderating factors and trait measures are utilized as mediating factors to better understand and model individual differences in the response to stimuli that induce boredom and dissociation. My experimental designs incorporate technological solutions with the aim of extending the amount of information that can be collected from any platform, as well as optimizing research costs.
My primary research interests are boredom, dissociation, and affective neuroscience. More generally, I am interested in how individual differences influence individuals’ reaction to stimuli. I take pride in my ability to unravel complex problems in both research design and statistical modeling. I welcome collaborations relating to studies of affective neuroscience, especially those possessing innovative experimental designs.
Supervisors: McWelling Todman, Wendy D'Andrea, and Marcel Kinsbourne
Phone: 646.574.7824
In the field of non-clinical psychology, my current research focuses on the relationships between boredom and dissociation. Through my research, I hope to better characterize the state of boredom. My research utilizes personality measures, cognitive tasks and physiological measures. Personality measures are utilized as moderating factors and trait measures are utilized as mediating factors to better understand and model individual differences in the response to stimuli that induce boredom and dissociation. My experimental designs incorporate technological solutions with the aim of extending the amount of information that can be collected from any platform, as well as optimizing research costs.
My primary research interests are boredom, dissociation, and affective neuroscience. More generally, I am interested in how individual differences influence individuals’ reaction to stimuli. I take pride in my ability to unravel complex problems in both research design and statistical modeling. I welcome collaborations relating to studies of affective neuroscience, especially those possessing innovative experimental designs.
Supervisors: McWelling Todman, Wendy D'Andrea, and Marcel Kinsbourne
Phone: 646.574.7824
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