Rita Tushingham
Read the oration for Rita Tushingham on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
Read the oration for Rita Tushingham on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
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.
Research suggests that autistic people are at a higher risk of suicide than non-autistic people. Figures show that up to 66% of autistic adults had thought about suicide during their lifetime (compared to 20% of non-autistic adults), and up to 35% had planned or attempted suicide.
LJMU is internationally recognised for our role at the forefront of innovation and pioneering research, and rated highly for the quality of our teaching and student experience.
As a part of the LJMU Qualitative Analysis in Action project, you can find out about the gender issues within Nepal.
TIMED is a large cross-cultural research study that will investigate for the first time how increasing digital technology use is affecting how we experience time as individuals and in society across Europe.
Read the oration for Andrew Holroyd OBE on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Professor Frank Sanderson.
Read the oration for Her Honour Elizabeth Steel on the award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University presented by Sir Malcolm Thornton.
Within the Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour we are involved in research which looks at perception, attention, emotion, learning and memory, sensory and motor processes, and includes animal models of neurobehavioral research. We investigate cognitive and brain mechanisms in psychologically and neurologically intact animals and humans, and the disruption of these processes caused by drugs, brain damage, ageing or atypical development.
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