Toloue Askarirad is a graduate student in the School of Psychology at The University of Adelaide in Australia.
Her research thesis is exploring an association between intelligence, personality traits, and ASMR, and is titled, “Do intelligence and personality traits influence ASMR perception?”
Toloue is looking for participants to take her online survey, which has been reviewed and approved by a Human Research Ethics Subcommittee. The faculty supervisor of her project is Professor Nick Burns.
The survey is open to individuals who watch ASMR videos, is fully anonymous, will not take longer than 40 minutes, and the results will only be used for academic purposes.
The survey will remain open until 200 participants have participated (or until June 30th, 2019).
Below is a link to the survey and more information.
Pa Chee Yang is an undergraduate student majoring in Applied Social Science with a concentration in Economics at the University of Wisconsin-Stout.
Eleanor Osborne-Ford is an undergraduate student, majoring in psychology, and pursuing her BSc Degree at Bath Spa University in the UK.
I’m happy to share that I am one of the co-authors of the first published study to show brain activity during ASMR.
I posted a prior article titled, “
Anders Köhler recently graduated from the University of Skövde in Sweden with a Degree of Bachelor of Arts and majored in Media Arts, Aesthetics, and Narration (Game Development – Sound).