Ellouise Long discusses the need to consider trolling
as a form of online violence and the role this plays in silencing women online
ahead of her presentation at the Sexual Violence Conference hosted by Middlesex
University in September 2015:
http://mdxminds.com/2015/07/06/convictions-for-violent-crimes-against-women-are-at-an-all-time-high-but-what-about-online-violence/
The Sexual Violence Conference takes place on Thursday 17 and Friday 18 September 2015 at Middlesex University, bringing together practitioners, policy makers and academics who work in the field of sexual violence, to share their knowledge and understanding: http://www.mdx.ac.uk/events/2015/09/sexual-violence-conference
The online common room for the Department of Psychology, Middlesex University, London, UK.
Tuesday, 7 July 2015
Thursday, 2 July 2015
Research Seminar: Prof. Juan Augusto, Middlesex University
Date and time: Wednesday 8th July, 11:00am, room C217.
Title: “Examples of Ambient Assisted Living Systems
Helping the Vulnerable"
Abstract: We will consider examples of Ambient Assisted
Living systems which have been created to help vulnerable citizens. One of
them was aimed at users officially diagnosed as experiencing early dementia
symptoms, the other example is on an ongoing project trying to provide support
for people with Down’s Syndrome. The
seminar will explore the type of services delivered as well as the development
methodology. Both projects have in common the use of user-centred development
processes, with stakeholders engaging with the developing team from early
stages and throughout the project.
Websites:
http://www.mdx.ac.uk/about-us/our-people/staff-directory/augusto-juan-carlos
http://www.jcaugusto.com/
Websites:
http://www.mdx.ac.uk/about-us/our-people/staff-directory/augusto-juan-carlos
http://www.jcaugusto.com/
Friday, 29 May 2015
Professor leads a debate at the International Summer Academy on controversial topics in assisted Reproductive Technologies.
Psychology Professor
Olga van den Akker is leading a debate in an event hosted by the Geneva based
Brocher Foundation which supports research for humans and society, on controversies
in third party assisted conception (1-5 June 2015).Key experts from across the world and Senior Academics will lecture and
lead the debates with the participating audiences.
Many controversial topics will be
presented, debated and discussed by participating audiences at the Brocher
foundation in Switzerland next week. Topics covered include; The impact on social life, the dimension of the infertility problem, the challenges raised by
new developments of ART, Donor related issues, homo-parenting, public policy
and legislative regulations on reproduction, embryo and gamete statue, and
economic and cost-effectiveness analysis, insurance policies implications and
regulatory agencies.
For more information see:
Wednesday, 25 March 2015
Visiting speaker: Phil Wheater, Manchester Metropolitan University
Date and time: Friday, March 27, 4:00pm, room CG48.
Title: “50 Shades of Green: The benefits and challenges
of managing urban greenspace"
Abstract:
Most urban dwellers look favourably on the greenspace
that lies close to their homes or places of work, few realise the richness of
the wildlife that can be supported by such environments. Nor do many of us
understand the different benefits, pressures, opportunities and challenges that
are involved in designing, maintaining and enhancing such spaces. This talk
presents a wide ranging tour of the different types of space and considers
conflicts and resolutions to these issues with reference to work carried out by
researchers at Manchester Metropolitan University. The topics covered will
include benefits (including on the public’s health and wellbeing) of urban
habitats, urban ecology, problems in urban open spaces, and the management of
urban wildlife and habitats.
Bio:
Phil Wheater is the Dean of the Faculty of Science and
Engineering and a Pro-Vice Chancellor at Manchester Metropolitan University. He
has been teaching, researching and writing about wildlife and urban ecology for
over 30 years, including textbooks on urban habitats and invertebrate animals,
reports on site management, and articles on human / environmental interactions.
Phil has worked on many different aspects of urban management from wildlife
ecology, through habitat management, to personal security and public health
issues. He has worked with a wide range of organisations associated with urban
habitats. These include metropolitan authorities (such as Manchester City
Council and the Corporation of London), national organisations (including
Natural England and the National Trust), and managers of a number of urban
fringe areas including sites of special scientific interest and national nature
reserves.
Website:
http://www.sste.mmu.ac.uk/staff/staffbiog/default.asp?StaffID=347
Monday, 9 March 2015
Thursday, March 19, 4:00pm. Two speakers in evolutionary psychology and neuroscience.
Visiting speaker: Karenleigh A. Overmann, University of
Oxford
Date and time: Thursday, Mar 19, 4:00pm, Committee Room 3.
Title: “Numerosity, materiality, and numerical
cognition"
Abstract:
Why is increasing cultural complexity associated with
counting to higher numbers? It’s not just things to count and reasons to count
them; materiality helps us think numerically, just as numbers change our
behavior. This presentation reviews what numbers are as concepts and how they
are acquired through the interaction of brains, bodies, and materiality
(Malafouris’ Material Engagement Theory). The brain contributes the perceptual
experience of quantity (numerosity), while the body interfaces brain and world
through functions like finger gnosia, haptic perception, and neural reactions
to tools. Material artifacts used for counting shape number concepts through
their affordances, influence numerical system outcomes over various time spans,
and act as the intermediate level between what a society knows and what any
individual learns. Various counting technologies—Neolithic clay tokens, Upper
Paleolithic tallies and hand stencils, and Middle Stone Age beads—are
reinterpreted through Material Engagement Theory.
Bio:
Karenleigh A. Overmann is a Clarendon scholar at the
University of Oxford, where she is working toward a DPhil in Archaeology. She
lectures for the Center for Cognitive Archaeology at the University of
Colorado, Colorado Springs. She has an MA in psychology and a BA in
anthropology, philosophy, and English from the University of Colorado. Her work
has appeared in Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Cambridge Archaeological
Journal, Current Anthropology, Journal of Anthropological Sciences, Rock Art
Research, Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Cognitive Science, Behavioral Sciences
and the Law, Persuasions: The Jane Austen Journal, and several edited volumes.
Website:
Visiting speaker:
Prof. Frederick L. Coolidge, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs
Date and time: Thursday, Mar 19, 5:00pm, Committee Room 3.
Title: “Evolutionary neuropsychology"
Abstract:
The present talk addresses the evolution of structures
and functions of the human brain. Since the earliest origins of life, cellular
evolution has been both a series of adaptations to the environment and
subsequent exaptations. The latter involves the reuse, recycling, or redeployment
of neurons for more complex higher cognitive functions, often in addition to
their original purposes. The present lecture will address just some of the
major exaptations of the human brain including the frontal, parietal, and
temporal lobes (including the hippocampus), the cerebellum, sleep and its
stages, and the extension of the brain into its external environment (embodied
cognition). The talk is based upon a forthcoming book, Evolutionary
Neuropsychology, to be published by Elsevier in early 2016.
Bio:
Frederick L. Coolidge is a Professor of Psychology and
Co-Director of the Center for Cognitive Archaeology at the University of
Colorado, Colorado Springs. He received his PhD from the University of Florida
and completed a two-year Postdoctoral Fellowship in Clinical Neuropsychology at
Shands Teaching Hospital, Gainesville, Florida. He has received three USA
Fulbright Fellowships to teach and conduct research in India. He has published
six books, over 120 journal articles, and numerous book chapters on such
wide-ranging topics as statistics, sleep and dreams, personality disorders,
cognitive archaeology, and the evolution of modern cognition. He is currently a
Senior Visiting Scholar at Oxford University, Keble College.
Websites:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There will be an intermission between the talks. You may attend one or both talks.
All are welcome. No need to register. Just show up. If
you have questions, please e-mail: Y.Russell@mdx.ac.uk.
Wednesday, 4 March 2015
Visiting speaker: Rocío García-Retamero, University of Granada, Spain
Date and time: Monday, Mar 9, 4:00pm, room C217.
Title: “Where are we going wrong? Evidence on
communicating probabilistic information"
Abstract:
Over the past years, numerical skills have become
increasingly necessary for navigating the modern health care environment.
Unfortunately, many people struggle to grasp numerical concepts that are
essential for understanding health-relevant information. In short, the general
public lacks basic numeracy, which limits their risk literacythe ability to
accurately interpret and make good decisions based on information about risk
(see www.RiskLiteracy.org). In this
talk, I will present a collection of studies investigating three research
questions. This research involves more than 5000 participants from 60 countries
and diverse walks of life (e.g., medical professionals, patients, general
populations, web panels). First, I will present research investigating how helpful
numbers are when communicating risks. This research converges to suggest that a
significant proportion of the population has problems understanding even very
simple numerical expressions of probability about health. Second, I will
present research investigating whether numeracy predicts health outcomes. This
research shows that compared to patients with high numeracy, patients with low
numeracy showed higher prevalence of comorbidity. Of note, these conclusions
hold after controlling for the effect of demographics and risk factors,
suggesting that numeracy is uniquely related to important health outcomes.
Finally, I will present the results of several interventions showing that
well-designed visual aids (1) help individuals with low in numeracy make more
accurate assessments of information about treatment risk reduction, and (2)
help promote shared decision making and healthy behaviors. I conclude that
appropriately designed visual aids can be highly effective, transparent, and
ethically desirable tools for improving risk communication, limiting the
influence of different levels of numeracy. Theoretical mechanisms, open
questions, and emerging applications of this research will be discussed.
Bio:
Dr. María del Rocío García Retamero Imedio is Associate Professor
in the Experimental Psychology Department, and Senior Member of the Learning,
Emotion, and Decision Research Group at the University of Granada. She is also
Associate Scientist at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, and
Affiliated Professor and Researcher at the Michigan Technological University.
Dr. Garcia-Retamero is recipient of 10 major research awards, including the
American Psychological Association’s 2012 Raymond S. Nickerson Best Paper Award
and the prize of the University of Granada for the best paper in 2012 in Social
and Behavioral Sciences for her work on risk communication. Dr. Garcia-Retamero
is an expert in risk perception and the psychology of health decision making.
She has published 100 papers on the topic in top-ranking journals in Medicine
and Psychology. Dr. Garcia-Retamero has published 2 academic books. In
“Transparent communication of health risks: Overcoming cultural differences”
(2013), she shows that informed medical decision making heavily reinforced
these days by the legal requirements for informed consent critically depends on
communication of quantitative medical information. In her research, Dr.
Garcia-Retamero has shown that in most cultures doctors and patients have
severe problems grasping a host of numerical concepts that are prerequisites
for understanding and communicating health-relevant risk information. She
conducted a wide range of studies in more than 60 different countries, which
converge to demonstrate that problems associated with risk illiteracy are not
simply the result of cognitive biases preventing good decision making. Rather,
errors occur because ineffective information formats complicate and mislead
adaptive decision makers. Her studies document that information formats that
exploit people’s inherent capacity to recognize relationships in naturally
occurring problems (so-called transparent information formats) can dramatically
enhance risk comprehension, communication, and recall and foster better
decisions about health especially in patients with limited numeracy. Dr.
Garcia-Retamero has worked extensively for several international companies in
the design of decision aids to maximize risk understanding across diverse
populations. She has also trained physicians and nurses in risk understanding
and medical decision making in 11 countries.
Websites:
Thursday, 26 February 2015
Mini-sandpit 3: ‘Behaviour change in urban environments’
Date: Friday 6th March 2015
Time: 12pm – 5.15pm
Venue: Red Loop, Middlesex University, Boulevard Drive, Aerodrome Road,
London, NW9 5QZ.
AN INVITATION FROM MARK GRAY, DICK COMLEY: 'MINI-SANDPIT', COMMITTEE ROOM 3 Facilitating cross-disciplinary and interdisciplinary work will be essential to the new direction for Middlesex. Middlesex research often crosses not only discipline boundaries but also the boundaries between Schools. While research centres often work successfully across them, these boundaries are not necessarily fixed: research opportunities, for example, may be 'problem centred' and respond to social, economic and cultural needs.
The third "mini-sandpit" workshop on 'Behaviour change in urban environments' will be held on the 6th March, and you are invited to register for the event through the Staff Development Portal<http://mdxstaffdev.libcal.com/event.php?id=916467>, for any queries please contact Mita Vaghji in the RKTO (m.vaghji@mdx.ac.uk<mailto:m.vaghji@mdx.ac.uk>). This event has been specially developed by Tom Dickins, Stephen Syrett, Andy Bardill, Meri Juntti, Maeve O’Loughlin, Rob Spencer, Mark Coulson, Stephen Nunn and Lian Lundy. There is a maximum of 50 places available for this third workshop. Researchers in ALL areas are welcome.
The aim of the workshop series is to explore areas for research collaboration in a relaxed, creative environment conducive to identifying scope for joint work across all Schools. Our (short format) sandpits, will focus on themes emerging from current policy discussions, technology choices or wider cultural and social issues.
Programme for the workshop
Informal conversations amongst colleagues in psychology, business, natural sciences and law revealed common interests in urban behaviour and environmental quality (both in their broadest contexts). Several of us are working on a range of complimentary topics and know of various colleagues working in linked urban areas (e.g. behaviour change, community resilience, ecosystem services, smart phone app development etc.) in both research and programme development.
The aim of the ‘open event’ is to:
· see how we can take forward these research and programme development synergies
· collaboratively identify research themes
· co-develop a core list of research questions
· plan to pursue a focused starter project
AN INVITATION FROM MARK GRAY, DICK COMLEY: 'MINI-SANDPIT', COMMITTEE ROOM 3 Facilitating cross-disciplinary and interdisciplinary work will be essential to the new direction for Middlesex. Middlesex research often crosses not only discipline boundaries but also the boundaries between Schools. While research centres often work successfully across them, these boundaries are not necessarily fixed: research opportunities, for example, may be 'problem centred' and respond to social, economic and cultural needs.
The third "mini-sandpit" workshop on 'Behaviour change in urban environments' will be held on the 6th March, and you are invited to register for the event through the Staff Development Portal<http://mdxstaffdev.libcal.com/event.php?id=916467>, for any queries please contact Mita Vaghji in the RKTO (m.vaghji@mdx.ac.uk<mailto:m.vaghji@mdx.ac.uk>). This event has been specially developed by Tom Dickins, Stephen Syrett, Andy Bardill, Meri Juntti, Maeve O’Loughlin, Rob Spencer, Mark Coulson, Stephen Nunn and Lian Lundy. There is a maximum of 50 places available for this third workshop. Researchers in ALL areas are welcome.
The aim of the workshop series is to explore areas for research collaboration in a relaxed, creative environment conducive to identifying scope for joint work across all Schools. Our (short format) sandpits, will focus on themes emerging from current policy discussions, technology choices or wider cultural and social issues.
Programme for the workshop
Informal conversations amongst colleagues in psychology, business, natural sciences and law revealed common interests in urban behaviour and environmental quality (both in their broadest contexts). Several of us are working on a range of complimentary topics and know of various colleagues working in linked urban areas (e.g. behaviour change, community resilience, ecosystem services, smart phone app development etc.) in both research and programme development.
The aim of the ‘open event’ is to:
· see how we can take forward these research and programme development synergies
· collaboratively identify research themes
· co-develop a core list of research questions
· plan to pursue a focused starter project
12:00pm – 12:30pm Informal sandwich lunch followed by a 12:30pm Start.
A chance to register and informally meet colleagues attending the event before the start. Lunch will be provided.
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