Psychology Research

A researcher conducting an experiment with a father and his baby.

A top 20 Psychology department in the UK for world-leading research publications.

Research Themes

  • Developmental Psychology

    How do we develop an understanding of the world around us? We look at cognitive, social, emotional and language development from before birth through to adolescence.

  • Cognitive Psychology

    What are the fundamental cognitive processes behind language, learning, memory, and attention? How does our understanding of cognition impact society?

  • Neuroscience and Neurocognition

    How does the brain respond to different environments and govern cognitive function? We research how humans understand and process the world around us.

  • Social Processes

    How do we develop definitions of morality or trust, and how do they affect our emotions in social interaction or decision making?

Laboratories

  • Children are little scientists. Join us on our journey to further research at one of the UK's most prominent Babylabs.

  • Aberrant Experience, Awareness, & Emotion Laboratory

    Research in the laboratory focuses on disorders in consciousness and aberrant experiences. These can include hallucinations, perceptual distortions and delusions. These experiences are often associated with neurological disorders and psychopathology.

  • Neuroscience of Speech Laboratory

    Research in the laboratory focuses primarily on investigating the neural bases of speech communication. We are interested in studying how normal brains communicate, and also what goes wrong in the brains of people with speech and language impairments.

  • We are interested in how people process emotionally salient stimuli, e.g., how accurately do we recognise emotions from facial expressions? Is this ability affected by perceptual cues such as pleasant vs. sour or bitter taste, or individual differences such as ethnicity?

  • In our lab, we investigate how infants learn about objects and categories in their environment, and how early language contributes to and shapes this learning.

Psychology news

Linked icons