Soeben ist ein Sammelband zum Thema „Empirical Comics Research: Digital, Multimodal, and Cognitive Methods“ erschienen. Die englischsprachige Aufsatzsammlung wird von Routledge publiziert und ist von den deutschen Comicforscher_innen Alexander Dunst, Jochen Laubrock und Janina Wildfeuer herausgegeben worden.
Kurzbeschreibung (Englisch):
„This edited volume brings together work in the field of empirical comics research. Drawing on computer and cognitive science, psychology and art history, linguistics and literary studies, each chapter presents innovative methods and establishes the practical and theoretical motivations for the quantitative study of comics, manga, and graphic novels. Individual chapters focus on corpus studies, the potential of crowdsourcing for comics research, annotation and narrative analysis, cognitive processing and reception studies. This volume opens up new perspectives for the study of visual narrative, making it a key reference for anyone interested in the scientific study of art and literature as well as the digital humanities.“
Inhalt:
1. Comics and Empirical Research: An Introduction (Alexander Dunst, Jochen Laubrock, Janina Wildfeuer)
I. Digital Approaches to Comics Research
2. Two Per Cent of What? Constructing a Corpus of Typical American Comic Books (Bart Beaty, Nick Sousanis, Benjamin Woo)
3. The Quantitative Analysis of Comics: Towards a Visual Stylometry of Graphic Narrative (Alexander Dunst, Rita Hartel)
4. „The Spider’s Web“: An Analysis of Fan Mail from Amazing Spider-Man, 1963-1995 (John Walsh, Shawn Martin, Jennifer St. Germain)
5. Crowdsourcing Comics Annotations (Mihnea Tufis and Jean-Gabriel Ganascia)
6. Computer Vision Applied to Comic Book Images (Christophe Rigaud and Jean-Christophe Burie)
II. Linguistics and Multimodal Analysis
7. From Empirical Studies to Visual Narrative Organization: Exploring Page Composition (John A. Bateman, Annika Beckmann, Rocio Varela)
8. Character Developments in Comics and Graphic Novels: A Systematic Analytical Scheme (Chiao-I Tseng, Jochen Laubrock, Jana Pflaeging)
9. How Informative are Information Comics in Science Communication? Empirical Results from an Eye Tracking Study and Knowledge Testing (Hans-Jürgen Bucher, Bettina Boy)
10. The Interpretation of an Evolving Line Drawing (Pascal Lefèvre, Gert Meesters)
III. Cognitive Processing and Comprehension
11. Viewing Static Visual Narratives Through the Lens of the Scene Perception and Event Comprehension Theory (SPECT) (Lester Loschky, John P. Hutson, Maverick E. Smith, Tim J. Smith, Joseph P. Magliano)
12. Attention to Comics: Cognitive Processing during Reading of Graphic Literature (Jochen Laubrock, Sven Hohenstein, Matthias Kümmerer)
13. Reading Words and Images: Factors Influencing Eye Movements in Comic Reading (Clare Kirtley, Christopher Murray, Phillip B. Vaughan, Benjamin W. Tatler)
14. Detecting Differences Between Adapted Narratives: Implication of Order of Modality on Exposure (Joseph P. Magliano, James Clinton, Edward J. O’Brien, David N. Rapp)
15. Visual Language Theory and the Scientific Study of Comics (Neil Cohn)