Psychology Colloquium: Body, Heart & Mind in Business: Creating Engaged and Collaborative Research Partnerships to Advance Knowledge on Well-Being & Performance at Work

The Body, Heart and Mind (BHM) in business is a large, highly active research group in the University of Sydney Business School. Our research seeks to advance knowledge on employee health, wellbeing and performance at work using rigorous, multidisciplinary, multimethod and multilevel methodologies. We are passionate about doing applied, engaged research and work closely with […]

Psychology Colloquium: “Perception in real-time: predicting the present, reconstructing the past”

A/ProfHinze Hogendoorn Principal Research Fellow In Psychology Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences The University of Melbourne   Abstract: We feel that we perceive events in the environment as they unfold in real-time. However, this intuitive view of perception is impossible to implement in the nervous system due to biological constraints such as neural transmission delays. […]

Psychology Colloquium: Causal investigations of cognitive training

Dr Hannah FilmerThe University of Queensland Abstract: What happens in the brain during cognitive training? How can we maximise the benefits of training? Functional imaging has provided insights into the neural basis of training, but this approach is correlational. An alternative is to use non-invasive brain stimulation which not only allows for causal inferences to […]

Psychology Colloquium: Expert Bias: Perceptions, Misperceptions, and Their Implications

Tess Neal, School of Social and Behavioral Sciences Arizona State University Abstract: Do experts assume that their expertise protects them from bias? One might hope and expect experts to be more protected than the average person against various psychological biases that affect judgment and decision making, yet the evidence supporting this expectation of expert objectivity […]

Psychology Colloquium: The ‘light’ and ‘dark’ sides of addiction: animal models, psychological processes, and the development of novel pharmacotherapies.

Dr Nicholas Everett, The Brain and Mind Centre, School of Psychology, University of Sydney.Abstract: While psychosocial interventions for substance use disorders can be effective for some, they are inaccessible for the many, and relapse occurs in 60-80% of people despite successful abstinence. Unfortunately, addiction medicine is in its infancy, with very few therapies approved for […]

Psychology Colloquium: There and Back Again: Bleed from Extraordinary Experiences

Dr Tom van Laer, Associate Professor of Narratology, University of SydneyAbstract: From re-enactments to pilgrimages, extraordinary experiences engage consumers with frames and roles that govern their actions for the duration of the experience. Exploring such extraordinary frames and roles, however, can make the act of returning to everyday life more difficult, a process prior research […]

Psychology Colloquium: Long-COVID what is it and what role can psychology play?

Professor Andrew Baillie, The Sydney School of Health Sciences in the Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of SydneyBio: Andrew is a clinical psychologist and Professor of Allied Health with Sydney Local Health District and The Sydney School of Health Sciences in the Faculty of Medicine and Health. He works within SLHD to build Allied […]

Psychology Colloquium: Where are the self-correcting mechanisms in science?

Professor Simine Vazire, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of MelbourneAbstract: We often hear the self-correcting mechanisms in science invoked as a reason to trust science, but it is not always clear what these mechanisms are.  Some quality control mechanisms, such as peer review for journals, or vetting for textbooks or for public dissemination, have recently […]

Psychology Colloquium: Consciousness

Professor Jakob Hohwy, Monash University.Bio: Professor Jakob Hohwy is the Director of the Monash Centre for Consciousness & Contemplative Studies. M3CS received a $12M philanthropic grant from the Three Springs Foundation. The Centre aims to conducts philosophical, neuroscientific and psychological research in consciousness and contemplative science. The Centre aims to make contemplative practices central to […]

Psychology Colloquium: Social Cognition, bench to clinic

Dr Michelle Kelly, Senior Lecturer, School of Psychological Sciences, University of NewcastleBio: Dr Michelle Kelly is a Clinical Psychologist and a Senior Lecturer in the School of Psychological Sciences at the University of Newcastle. Her research focus is on social functioning in clinical groups including dementia and traumatic brain injury. She also works closely with […]