Acknowledgements
Dedication
List of Contributors
Introduction: Social Science of the Cinema: Fade In
James C. Kaufman and Dean Keith Simonton
Section One: The Creation
1. Writing for success: Screenplays and cinematic impact
Dean Keith Simonton
2. Sell by date? Examining the shelf life and effects of female
actors in popular films
Stacy L. Smith, Amy Granados, Marc Choueiti and Katherine M.
Pieper
3. Resolving the paradox of film music through a cognitive
narrative approach to film comprehension
Annabel Cohen
Section Two: The Audience
4. What type of movie person are you? Understanding individual
differences in film preferences and uses: A psychographic
approach
Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic, Andrea Kallias, and Anne Hsu
5. Film through the human visual system: Finding patterns and
limits
Jordan E. DeLong, Kaitlin L. Brunick, and James E. Cutting
6. Self and the cinematic experience in the age of electronic
transmission
Gerald C. Cupchik and Michelle C. Hilscher
Section Three: The Production
7. The producer-director dyad: Managing the faultline between art
and commerce
Joris J. Ebbers, Nachoem M. Wijnberg, and Pawan V. Bhansing
8. Networks and rewards among Hollywood artists: Evidence for a
social structural ordering of creativity
Gino Cattani and Simone Ferriani
9. Strategic assets and performance across institutional
environments
Allègre L. Hadida
Section Four: The Reception
10. Analyzing the Academy Awards: Factors associated with winning
and when surprises occur
Iain Pardoe and Dean Keith Simonton
11. Responses to and judgments of acting on film
Thalia R. Goldstein
12. As good as it gets? Blockbusters and the inequality of box
office results since 1950
Victor Fernandez-Blanco, Victor Ginsburgh, Juan Prieto-Rodriguez,
and Sheila Weyers
End Section
13. Social Science of the Cinema: Fade Out
Joshua Butler and James C. Kaufman
James C. Kaufman, Ph.D., is Professor of Educational Psychology at
the University of Connecticut. An international leader in the field
of creativity, he has published 23 books and more than 200 papers.
He is the president of the American Psychological Association's
Division 10 (Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts) and the founding
editor of Psychology of Popular Media Culture.
Dean Keith Simonton, Ph.D., is Distinguished Professor of
Psychology at the University of California, Davis. Internationally
known for his research on genius, creativity, and leadership, he
has produced over 450 publications that have received more than
11,000 citations, and 180 publications have been cited at least 10
times. He is the winner of APA's Division 46 Distinguished
Scientific Contribution to Media Psychology. His Google Scholar h
index is 51.
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