![]() ![]() We were early and enthusiastic adopters of open science practices to guide our research work. We value methodological plurality – and conduct research using both quantitative and qualitative methods. We are experts in the study of trust, deception, morality, resilience and identity, and explore these as dynamic social processes at the individual, group and organisational level. We specialise in the psychologically informed analysis of digital data – including digital visual data (CCTV, body-cam, smartphone videos, face recognition, face morphing) social media data (social network, Twitter and blog data) smartphone and ambient sensor data (digital traces and location data) as well as studies using virtual reality or whole-body motion capture technology in the laboratory. Our research is also funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) as well as government agencies, industry and charitable institutions. We are home to the ESRC Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats (CREST), the UK’s hub for behavioural and social science research into security threats. Identity conflicts of persons with a learning disability and their professional carers Motivational configuration of social performance environments Serially missed appointments in the NHS: a linkage pathfinder project to inform interventionsĮffects of Types of Service Provision and Consultation Interactions on Carer Adaptation to Childhood Epilepsy ![]() If it Looks Like a Duck: Emergent Categorical Structure in the Human Conceptual System GetAMoveOn: transforming health through enabling mobility The Manipulative presentation techniques of control and coercive offenders ![]() SL: CREST: An International Academic-Practitioner Sympoium on Behavioural Science and Security SL: Examining turning points within investigative interviews SL: Safeguarding the Legal Rights of Youth RBOC N+ - Resilience Beyond Observed Capabilities ![]()
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