Students Go Mental
Students from the School of Psychology, University of Liverpool have organised a mental health lived experience conference that invites you to listen to and share experiences of mental distress. The…
Students from the School of Psychology, University of Liverpool have organised a mental health lived experience conference that invites you to listen to and share experiences of mental distress. The…
A new study reveals that graduate psychology students receive little teaching on understanding military medical ethics and are, to a great extent, unaware of their obligations under the Geneva Conventions.
Peter Kinderman on the US Constitution Project – “In 2005 I was delighted that the British Psychological Society very willingly and without demur agreed to ratify an official statement repudiating…
Below is an interview with Anna Mattia who shares with us her experience as a post-graduate in Liverpool. She is studying the Investigative and Forensic MSc. 1) Anna, tell us…
Exhibition information for the John Moores Painting Prize 2014 competition for contemporary painters: John Moores Prize 2014 – Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool museums.
Richard Mayne, was a Leeds University student who was one of the 298 people killed in MH17, the plane brought down in the Ukraine last week. Just before his death…
Donations to a charity supported by Flight MH17 victim Richard Mayne have almost doubled overnight to a current total of over £9,000, with several individual contributors pledging as much as…
You might be aware about strange case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hide or, if not, of how the initially good intentions of a “respectable” scientist can go disastrously wrong…
Professor Caroline Rowland and psychology student Katie Brewin from the School of Psychology are testing a new BabyTalk app this summer. Together with Computer Science they have developed the BabyTalk…
From time to time we hear about scientists who conduct experiments that generate a lot of excitement. It is perhaps unsurprising though that their research is often perceived as being…