Psychology MRes: Who teaches this course
About the faculty and staff
The Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences teaches this course. Students benefit from a lively study environment, thanks to the wide range of postgraduate courses on offer.
Programmes cover everything from English literature and music to human rights and politics.
The Faculty provides a vibrant and forward-thinking environment for study with:
- courses designed in collaboration with industry professionals – keeping you up to date with the latest developments;
- established connections with the London arts and media scene – with a range of guest speakers, professors and lecturers visiting the University; and
- committed and enthusiastic staff – many of whom are expert practitioners as well as leading academics and researchers.
The Faculty's combination of academics and practitioners makes it a unique environment in which to further your studies and your career.
Where is the Faculty based? Most students are based at the University's Penrhyn Road campus, with our music and education courses taught at the Kingston Hill campus.
Staff teaching on this course
Dr Georgia Butler
Research areas: Impulsivity and risk taking; recreational drug use; eating behaviours
Examples of topics for guided research activities or dissertations:
- Identifying measures of impulsivity and risk taking and identifying the different factors of impulsivity
- Investigating the relationship between compulsive behaviours and impulsivity
- Investigating the relationship between recreational drug use, risk taking and impulsive behaviour
- Identifying measurements of eating behaviours which tap into impulsive behaviours
- The relationship between eating behaviours and impulsivity
Skills that may be acquired: Planning and designing research; the use of statistical analyses; conducting a literature review; questionnaire design.
Dr Anthony Esgate
Areas of interest: Anthony's main areas of teaching are quantitative research methods and applied psychology. The latter especially include ergonomics and sports psychology. He is a chartered psychologist, a full (founding) member of the BPS division of sports and exercise psychology and a registered member of the Ergonomics Society. Anthony has held research posts in the areas of stress and performance and also in human-computer interaction. In addition, he has interests in the areas of laterality and the psychology of music and of mathematics.
Dr Fatima Felisberti
Research areas: Research areas: Face and emotion perception; visual attention; memory and social cognition.
The research in my laboratory aims to uncover environmental factors that modulate the way we identify emotions in others and recognize faces of unfamiliar people in different social contexts. Self-face recognition is investigated, especially how attachment style and personality traits affect the way one perceives his/her own facial features and attractiveness. Different aspects of visual attention and the visual aesthetics are also addressed.
Skills that may be acquired: Questionnaire and survey analysis; visual perception and cognitive testing; experimental programming, statistical analyses; literature review; use of bibliographic databases.
Dr Harriet Tenenbaum
Research areas: Developmental
Examples of topics for guided research activities or dissertations:
- Children's learning and participation in everyday conversations with peers, parents, teachers, and siblings (especially about gender, science, and emotion)
- Gender development
- Emotion understanding
- Science learning
- Children's reasoning about social issues, such as rights, race, and gender discrimination
- Achievement motivation and school adjustment; socio-cultural theory
Skills that may be acquired: Quasi-experimental design; experimental design; meta-analysis; methods of analysing conversations; longitudinal design; standardised testing, statistical analyses, literature review, use of bibliographic databases; coding data; inter-rater reliability.
Professor Philip Terry
Research area: Biopsychology; recreational use of drugs and alcohol
Examples of topics for dissertations:
- People's ability to estimate the alcohol content of a drink
- The arousing effects of caffeine
- Looking at alcohol's or caffeine's effects on time perception
- 'Binge drinking'
- Experimental studies of the effects of long-term cannabis use on behavioural responses to alcohol
- Survey and interview-based studies of why ex-users of drugs stop using recreational drugs
- Survey and interview-based studies of drug and alcohol use in hazardous situations (eg in relation to driving)
- (Note that studies related to cocaine and cannabis use will require that the student can identify a suitable sample of recreational drug users)
Skills that may be acquired: Experimental design; basic principles of psychopharmacology; construction of questionnaires and structured interviews; measuring drug effects; cognitive testing; statistical analyses; literature review; use of bibliographic databases.
Professor Frédéric Vallée-Tourangeau
Research area: Cognitive psychology; thinking and reasoning
Examples of topics for guided research activities or dissertations: In general terms, the research conducted investigates the importance of problem representation in solving problems and how these representations may be distributed between reasoners and artefacts. For example, in inductive reasoning tasks the way the information is presented determines the quality of the inferences. In turn, people's success at solving problems is examined when they can physically manipulate artefacts in their immediate environments. The focus of this research is how people naturally restructure the objects in front of them to help them reason better and solve problems more efficiently. Ideas such as representation, insight, creativity, and extended cognition inform these research efforts.
Skills that may be acquired: Experimental design; cognitive testing; data management and statistical analyses; literature review; poster preparation for conference presentation; use of bibliographic databases.
Dr Gaelle Villejoubert
Gaelle's research aims to contribute to the psychology of risk and uncertainty and the psychology of decision-making.
Her focus is on how individuals reason about, judge, communicate, or make decisions under uncertainty both in the laboratory and in applied settings such as forensic, health or medical settings.This includes work on:
- how individuals communicate and interpret uncertainty qualitatively;
- how they draw conclusions based on uncertain information; and
- how judgements, decisions and choices are shaped by individuals' motivations, mode of thinking (intuitive or deliberative) and the way information is distributed in their environment.
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Many of our staff in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences are research active. This ensures they are in touch with the latest thinking and bring best practice to your studies.
Learn more about the facilities available to you as a student of this course. Find out more...
A range of speakers give psychology talks to our students. Past topics have included schadenfreude; museum conversations; and gender differences in peer conversations.



