Collaborative Innovation Living Lab (CILL)
The Collaborative Innovation Living Lab places people living with dementia at the centre of the research-to-innovation process.
The Collaborative Innovation Living Lab places people living with dementia at the centre of the research-to-innovation process.
The School of Law and Justice Studies is located in the £37.6 million Redmonds building, which provides three impressive lecture theatres, as well as teaching and seminar rooms, IT suites, social learning spaces, roof terraces and a Starbucks café.
Based within LJMU’s Faculty of Engineering and Technology, LIVE Lab provides cutting-edge facilities for the development and delivery of usability research through immersive, virtual, mixed and augmented reality technologies.
At LJMU the wellbeing of our students and staff is really important to us. That’s why we've created a calendar of events including free workshops and activities over this academic year, for our LJMU community to get involved in.
Challenge your intellect, advance your legal skills and enhance your professional network. Explore postgraduate law course at LJMU.
Read the oration for Johnny Ball on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
The overall aim of this proposed exchange programme is to bring together an international team of researchers with a wide variety of expertise in supply chain risk management, hazard identification and safety assessment, and to tackle the challenges faced by industry requiring specialist knowledge and innovation.
In the £26 million Tom Reilly Building, you’ll find psychology students recording brain activity with EEG and fNIRS and using virtual reality systems and a driving simulator to test out simulated activities. See more of the facilities at LJMU's School of Psychology.
q:LJMU is an inter-disciplinary space for LJMU staff and PhD students interested in research on LGBT+ issues.
To celebrate International Day of Women and Girls in Science, we talk to five of the top female scientists at Liverpool John Moores University to find out their thoughts on how to get more women and girls into their fields.