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Understanding minds, behaviours, and emotions
Location: King Henry Building and Langstone Campus
Our psychology laboratory facilities help us understand, examine and evaluate the mind, behaviours and how people think, act and feel.
Our researchers, students and academics alongside partnering organisations such as police and local councils apply information gathered across our laboratories in areas such as neuroscience, lie detection, interview techniques, stress and pain thresholds.
Record and analyse responses
Use specialist EEG equipment to measure electrical activity in the brain and neural processes.
Utilise eye-tracking technology
Discover how eye movement can be tracked and analysed to measure spatial attention.
Access new digital audio and visual recording equipment
In our observation suites, we have modern digital audio and visual recording equipment for use during observation sessions.
Collect data in real time
With our motion capture laboratory you can monitor movement and reactions using automated tracking systems, cameras and specialist softwares.
Explore how the body reacts
In our health laboratories, we house a variety of fitness equipment to induce stress and pain to examine how humans react to different psychological states.
Equipment and amenities
- Large Observation Suite – with new digital audio and visual recording equipment
- Forensic Interview Suite – with new digital audio and visual recording equipment and two-way mirrors for discrete observation purposes.
- Psychophysiology Laboratory – with EEG equipment, including the Curry EEG system with Stim 2 software and Brainvision products, to record and analyse physical responses, such as electrical activity in the brain and neural processes.
- 3 x Health Laboratories – with cold pressor water baths including Grant Cold pressor Immersion baths, physiological BioPac systems to monitor blood pressure, skin conductance and heart rate, to explore how the body reacts to different psychological states. We also house a variety of fitness equipment to induce stress and pain.
- Eye-Tracking Laboratory – with Tobii equipment, including Pro Fusion and Pro Glasses, to discover how eye movement can be tracked and analysed to measure spatial attention, and used to study areas such as facial recognition and change blindness.
- Dog Cognition Laboratory – Our research is strictly observational, we give the dogs various fun games to solve and by observing their decisions and strategies, we learn about their behaviour and cognitive processes.
- Motion Capture Laboratory – a large space with 10 Oqus 500+ automated tracking system (1000 Hz, full resolution) cameras and Qualysis Track Manager (QTM) software to allow data collection on movement and reactions.
- Vive Wireless VR equipment and Steam Software
- FLIR Thermal Camera
Research projects
Our team at the Autism Centre for Research on Employment (ACRE) has developed an innovative approach to autism employment support that focuses on supporting employers, not just autistic employees, including a suite of freely available Profiling Assessment (PA©) tools.
Our researchers have pioneered Cognitive Credibility Assessment (CCA) - an ethical, information-gathering, lie detection procedure that capitalises on differences in the cognitive processing and strategies that truth tellers and liars use.
Our researchers developed the Self-Administered Interview and Timeline Technique as investigative tools to elicit comprehensive memory accounts from witnesses, victims, and informants. These tools have been adopted into policy in the UK, US and Europe, leading to improved practice and training in police forces and national security agencies.
Our research on orangutan long calls has contributed to the first discovery of a new living ape species in nearly a century, the Tapanuli orangutan. With fewer than 800 individuals, it is the most endangered great ape species in the world. The team has also co-developed methods to assess the survival potential of rehabilitant orangutans with conservation and government organisations in Malaysia.
Related facilities
Dog Cognition Centre
In the Dog Cognition Centre, we're exploring the behaviour and cognitive processes of man's best friend – and studying everything from human-dog communication, to facial expressions in dogs.
International Centre for Research in Forensic Psychology
The ICRFP has an established international reputation for conducting a broad range of criminological and forensic psychology research.
Centre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology
In the Centre for Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology, we're exploring evolutionary processes and comparing humans with other animals, to study the origins of behaviour.
Related courses
Where to find us
King Henry Building
King Henry I Street
1024ºË¹¤³§
PO1 2ER
Langstone Campus
Furze Lane
1024ºË¹¤³§
PO4 8LW