Fr. 134.00

The Experience of Fear in Horror Films - Methods for Software-Based Analysis and Interpretation of Narrative Suspense

English · Paperback / Softback

Will be released 14.09.2025

Description

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The multimodal study on the experience of suspense and fear in horror films is part of a collaborative project funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG), involving Film Studies (University of Mainz) and Computer Science (University of Hanover). The project aims to expand the digital research infrastructure through the development of a software platform that enables researchers to extract data from audiovisual material both automatically and manually. In this initial case study, a corpus of 20 slasher films a subgenre of horror was analyzed. The system was equipped with tools for manual annotation and basic algorithmic procedures to capture shot lengths, shot sizes, brightness and volume levels, and face recognition. Assuming that triggering fear is a functional core of suspense in horror films, the study uses exploratory statistical methods to identify patterns in the structure of relevant content. Ultimately, the research shows that slasher films simulate features of dangerous situations through their cinematic staging situations to which human perception is evolutionarily attuned.

List of contents

Introduction .- Main Part .- Conclusion/Outlook.

About the author

Julian Sittel is a research associateat the Department of Film, Theatre, Media, and Cultural Studies at the University of Mainz. As part of a project funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) to strengthen digital infrastructure in media studies, he is developing a software platform for the systematic analysis of film and video.

Summary

The multimodal study on the experience of suspense and fear in horror films is part of a collaborative project funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG), involving Film Studies (University of Mainz) and Computer Science (University of Hanover). The project aims to expand the digital research infrastructure through the development of a software platform that enables researchers to extract data from audiovisual material both automatically and manually. In this initial case study, a corpus of 20 slasher films—a subgenre of horror—was analyzed. The system was equipped with tools for manual annotation and basic algorithmic procedures to capture shot lengths, shot sizes, brightness and volume levels, and face recognition. Assuming that triggering fear is a functional core of suspense in horror films, the study uses exploratory statistical methods to identify patterns in the structure of relevant content. Ultimately, the research shows that slasher films simulate features of dangerous situations through their cinematic staging—situations to which human perception is evolutionarily attuned.

Product details

Authors Julian Sittel
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Release 14.09.2025, delayed
 
EAN 9783658489250
ISBN 978-3-658-48925-0
No. of pages 263
Illustrations VII, 263 p. 137 illus., 128 illus. in color.
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Art > Photography, film, video, TV

Fotografie, Computerkunst, Neuroscience, Digital Humanities, Multimodality, Film and Television Studies, Cognitive Science, Film Studies, horror film

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