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PSY 357 Origins and Significance of Attractiveness Preferences and Stereotypes

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH PROJECT

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Faculty:

Judith Langlois, Ph.D.

Contact:

langloislab@psy.utexas.edu, 475-7908

Description:

At the Children's Research Lab we're trying to find out what types of faces infants, children, and adults prefer, how and why individuals form stereotypes based on attractiveness, and how these preferences and stereotypes change throughout development (www.psy.utexas.edu/langloislab)

Qualifications:

We are looking for enthusiastic, responsible, hard-working undergraduates to work in our lab running experiments on the development of facial preferences and perception in infants, children, and adults. Applicants should be interested in developmental psychology and be able to work ten hours per week in the lab (according to your schedule), typically in blocks of time 2-3 days a week for 2-5 hours at a time. Studies are generally run from 9am to 5pm Monday through Friday and 9am to 2pm on Saturdays, so we do ask you to be available on occasional Saturdays. This job involves interacting with Austin-area parents and their children, and therefore requires good social skills as well as reliability and initiative. Attention to detail is a must. Running the experiments often involves working with a computer and other equipment. Knowledge of the Macintosh is helpful but not necessary. Because of the amount of time needed to train you on our equipment and procedures, we ask for a two semester commitment (summer-fall or fall-spring). You will also be required to attend a lab meeting and write a journal-style paper on the research that we are doing.

Duties:

Running experiments, interacting with Austin-area parents and their children or adult participants, attending lab meetings. May also include: scheduling appointments; library research; some data entry or analysis; designing and creating stimuli.

Other Information

If you are considering graduate school or are unsure about the direction you want to take with your undergraduate degree, research experience such as this is essential!  See our web site for more information or contact us for an interview.

PSY 357 Undergraduate Research Projects (FALL 2005)
PSY 357 Course Requirements

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Updated 20 April 2005
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