Electrical and Electronic Engineering Research Centre
The Electrical and Electronic conducts research into electrical power engineering and electronics
The Electrical and Electronic conducts research into electrical power engineering and electronics
We are a group of academics and scholarly informed practitioners with great experience in delivering ground-breaking academic, market research and consultancy projects on the subject areas of digital marketing and retailing.
Find out more about the Research Institute for Literature and Cultural History at Liverpool John Moores University.
The Electrical and Electronic Engineering Research Centre offer a variety of services to businesses and organisations, including testing and qualification of microelectronic and power devices, simulation and modelling of electric machines, as well as variable-speed drives and power electronic converters.
The Electrical and Electronic Engineering Research Centre have several research groups; the Applied Forensic Technology Research (AFTR) Group, the Control and Logistics Group, the Industrial Design Group, the Electric Machines and Drives Group, the Microelectronics Research Group and the Sensors and Communications Group.
The Violence and Adverse Childhood Experiences research group focuses on preventing interpersonal violence and adverse childhood experiences through research, advocacy and policy impact.
The Business, Corporate, Financial and Technology Law Unit is committed to fostering an intellectual environment and advancing scholarship within business and finance law.
Find out more about BEST's expertise in value creation in construction and property.
Wave propagation in lattices and microstructures is one of MEMARC's key research specialisms. Researchers working in this area concentrate on invisibility, focusing and shielding.
These LJMU researchers collectively advance understanding of human cognition, brain function, and behaviour across domains including memory, perception, motivation, language, decision making, and clinical neuroscience.