Substance Use and Behavioural Addictions
Our Substance Use and Behavioural Addictions research group conduct world leading research into the causes and consequences of substance use on an individual and societal level
Our Substance Use and Behavioural Addictions research group conduct world leading research into the causes and consequences of substance use on an individual and societal level
The Digital Health Interest Group within the Institute for Health Research are actively engaged with digital health research and aim to develop long-standing interventions to improve health care and pathways.
This project focuses on the role olfactory and oral perception plays in shaping our consummatory experiences, preferences, and food seeking behaviours. Research into this area is important to health research, shaping understanding of individual differences in food selection, consumption, and other dietary behaviours.
Find out more information about our Visiting Research Fellows.
This project focuses on the lived experiences of people prescribed cannabis in the UK.
LJMU are always looking for volunteers to help out in our research studies. If you're interested in taking part, find out what studies we are currently running.
Are you over 50 years of age and would like to take part in a research project looking at the effects of exercise on the function of blood vessels?
LJMU staff and students are invited to this special research symposium to celebrate the 5th anniversary of the commissioning of Prospero, LJMU’s central high performance computing (HPC) facility.
Five years ago, Liverpool John Moores University switched on Prospero, a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster named for the wise magician in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
See our full results and more detail about LJMU Research on our Research spotlight pages. On these pages, we showcase how research has an impact – in our teaching, in our city region and in the values our university lives by.