Psychology Colloquium: Dr Jelena Brcic (University of the Fraser Valley)

Dr Jelena Brcic (University of the Fraser Valley)Title: Reported Psychological Growth Following Work in Extreme and Unusual Environments: Role of Perceived Stress and Coping Abstract: There are psychological, biological, and sociological constructs that emerge within extreme and unusual environments (EUE) that cannot be studied elsewhere. Post-Experience Change (PEC), which is significantly modelled after Post-Traumatic Growth (PTG), […]

Psychology Colloquium: Prof Paul Rhodes (USYD)

Prof Paul Rhodes (USYD)Title: Eco-psychology: a critical paradigm in the climate emergency Abstract: This presentation makes the argument that mainstream psychological practice is not equipped to respond to distress associated with the climate emergency. This is because the field focusses on individual pathology, rather than ecological context. It remains reticent about activism and politics and […]

Psychology Colloquium: HDR Prize Ceremony, with presentations by Dr Roslyn Wong, Dr Anastaia Suraev & Dr Kelly Dann

H. Tasman Lovell Memorial Medallion for the Best PhD Thesis in the School of Psychology for 2023Awarded to Dr Roslyn Wong for Anticipatory prediction during online language processing. Faculty of Science Prize for Outstanding PhD Thesis for 2023 Awarded to Dr Anastaia Suraev for From Prohibition to Prescription: The Role of Cannabinoids in Sleep. 2024 […]

Psychology Colloquium: Dr Will Harrison (University of the Sunshine Coast)

Dr Will Harrison (University of the Sunshine Coast)Title: Seeing More with Less: Efficient sensory coding with and without eye movements Abstract: It is often difficult to understand perceptual and cognitive processes from a scientific point of view. Unfortunately, I think we often mistake our difficulty in understanding a problem with the complexity of the problem itself. […]

Psychology Colloquium: Dr Will Ngiam (University of Adelaide)

Dr Will Ngiam (University of Adelaide)Title: Multivariate decoding of visual attention and memory – is what we see, what we remember? Abstract: The ability to select relevant information and maintain it in mind – our attention and working memory respectively in broad strokes – is central to perception and cognition. In hopes of better understanding of […]

Psychology Colloquium: Prof Virginia Slaughter (UQ)

Prof Virginia Slaughter (UQ)Title: Do humans imitate from birth? Abstract: Imitation in human newborns is widely cited as evidence of an inborn Mirror Neuron System that underpins human social behaviour, even though its existence has been debated for decades. The possibility that newborns do not imitate was reinvigorated in recent years by research from our lab at […]

Psychology Colloquium: Dr Christina Perry (Macquarie University)

Dr Christina Perry (Macquarie University)Title: “Incubation of Craving” – investigating changes to brain and behaviour during alcohol abstinence in rats Abstract: Alcohol-associated cues can produce intense craving in people with alcohol use disorder, which in turn can lead to relapse. Such cues may come in the form of advertising, places where a person used to drink, […]