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Advances in Liaison Based Public Order Policing in England: Human Rights and Negotiating the Management of Protest? (2013)
Journal Article
Stott, C., Scothern, M., & Gorringe, H. (2013). Advances in Liaison Based Public Order Policing in England: Human Rights and Negotiating the Management of Protest?. Policing, 7(2), 212-226. https://doi.org/10.1093/police/pat007

This article provides further analysis of an emerging ‘liaison’ based approach to the policing of public order in England and Wales (Gorringe, H., Stott, C. and Rosie, M. (2012). ‘Dialogue Police, Decision Making, and the Management of Public Order D... Read More about Advances in Liaison Based Public Order Policing in England: Human Rights and Negotiating the Management of Protest?.

Compliance, resistance and incipient compliance when responding to directives (2012)
Journal Article
Kent. (2012). Compliance, resistance and incipient compliance when responding to directives. Discourse Studies, 711 -730. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461445612457485

How does a parent get a child to do something? And, indeed, how might the child avoid complying or seem to comply without actually having done so? This article uses conversation analysis to identify the interactionally preferred and dispreferred resp... Read More about Compliance, resistance and incipient compliance when responding to directives.

Counterbalancing for Serial Order Carryover Effects in Experimental Condition Orders (2012)
Journal Article
Brooks. (2012). Counterbalancing for Serial Order Carryover Effects in Experimental Condition Orders. Psychological Methods, 600 - 614. https://doi.org/10.1037/a0029310

Reactions of neural, psychological, and social systems are rarely, if ever, independent of previous inputs and states. The potential for serial order carryover effects from one condition to the next in a sequence of experimental trials makes counterb... Read More about Counterbalancing for Serial Order Carryover Effects in Experimental Condition Orders.

Intergroup identity perceptions and their implications for intergroup forgiveness: The Common Ingroup Identity Model and its efficacy in the field (2012)
Journal Article
Noor. (2012). Intergroup identity perceptions and their implications for intergroup forgiveness: The Common Ingroup Identity Model and its efficacy in the field. https://doi.org/10.1080/03033910.2010.10446332

Three studies revisited the application of the Common Ingroup Identity Model (CIIM) to the Northern Irish conflict and shed light on the factors that potentially limit the scope of the CIIM. Study 1 (N =61) showed that both conflict protagonists unan... Read More about Intergroup identity perceptions and their implications for intergroup forgiveness: The Common Ingroup Identity Model and its efficacy in the field.

When suffering begets suffering: The Psychology of competitive victimhood between adversarial groups in violent conflicts (2012)
Journal Article
Noor. (2012). When suffering begets suffering: The Psychology of competitive victimhood between adversarial groups in violent conflicts. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 351 - 374. https://doi.org/10.1177/1088868312440048

Inter-group competitive victimhood (CV) describes the efforts of members of groups involved in violent conflicts to establish that their group has suffered more than their adversarial group. Such efforts contribute to conflicts’ escalation and impede... Read More about When suffering begets suffering: The Psychology of competitive victimhood between adversarial groups in violent conflicts.

Participation in mass gatherings can benefit well-being: Longitudinal and control data from a North Indian Hindu pilgrimage event (2012)
Journal Article
(2012). Participation in mass gatherings can benefit well-being: Longitudinal and control data from a North Indian Hindu pilgrimage event. PloS one, e47291 -e47291. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0047291

How does participation in a long-duration mass gathering (such as a pilgrimage event) impact well-being? There are good reasons to believe such collective events pose risks to health. There are risks associated with communicable diseases. Moreover, t... Read More about Participation in mass gatherings can benefit well-being: Longitudinal and control data from a North Indian Hindu pilgrimage event.

The science of enhanced student engagement and employability: introducing the psychology stream of the HEA STEM conference (2012)
Journal Article
(2012). The science of enhanced student engagement and employability: introducing the psychology stream of the HEA STEM conference. Psychology Teaching Review, 3 -8

The Higher Education Academy (HEA) is committed to enhancing the quality of learning and teaching for all university students in the UK, and the inaugural conference for the Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) subjects, held in Ap... Read More about The science of enhanced student engagement and employability: introducing the psychology stream of the HEA STEM conference.

Who stays, who drops out?: Biosocial predictors of longer-term adherence in participants attending an exercise referral scheme in the UK (2012)
Journal Article
(2012). Who stays, who drops out?: Biosocial predictors of longer-term adherence in participants attending an exercise referral scheme in the UK. BMC Public Health, 347 - ?. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-347

BACKGROUND: Exercise referral schemes are one of the most popular forms of physical activity intervention in primary care in the UK and present an opportunity to better understand the factors related to exercise adherence. But standard schemes tend t... Read More about Who stays, who drops out?: Biosocial predictors of longer-term adherence in participants attending an exercise referral scheme in the UK.

“Risky Business”: Constructing the “choice” to “delay” motherhood in the British press (2012)
Journal Article
Budds, K., Locke, A., & Burr, V. (2013). “Risky Business”: Constructing the “choice” to “delay” motherhood in the British press. Feminist Media Studies, 13(1), 132-147. https://doi.org/10.1080/14680777.2012.678073

Over the last few decades the number of women becoming pregnant later on in life has markedly increased. Medical experts have raised concerns about the increase in the number of women having babies later, owing to evidence that suggests that advancin... Read More about “Risky Business”: Constructing the “choice” to “delay” motherhood in the British press.

Structural and functional analysis of the symmetrical Type I restriction endonuclease R.EcoR124I(NT) (2012)
Journal Article
(2012). Structural and functional analysis of the symmetrical Type I restriction endonuclease R.EcoR124I(NT). PloS one, e35263 -?. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0035263

Type I restriction-modification (RM) systems are comprised of two multi-subunit enzymes, the methyltransferase (~160 kDa), responsible for methylation of DNA, and the restriction endonuclease (~400 kDa), responsible for DNA cleavage. Both enzymes sha... Read More about Structural and functional analysis of the symmetrical Type I restriction endonuclease R.EcoR124I(NT).

Preserved local but disrupted contextual figure-ground influences in an individual with abnormal function of intermediate visual areas (2012)
Journal Article
Brooks. (2012). Preserved local but disrupted contextual figure-ground influences in an individual with abnormal function of intermediate visual areas. Neuropsychologia, 1393 - 1407. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.02.024

Visual perception depends not only on local stimulus features but also on their relationship to the surrounding stimulus context, as evident in both local and contextual influences on figure-ground segmentation. Intermediate visual areas may play a r... Read More about Preserved local but disrupted contextual figure-ground influences in an individual with abnormal function of intermediate visual areas.

Cue Competition Affects Temporal Dynamics of Edge-assignment in Human Visual Cortex (2011)
Journal Article
Brooks. (2011). Cue Competition Affects Temporal Dynamics of Edge-assignment in Human Visual Cortex. Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 631 - 644. https://doi.org/10.1162/jocn.2010.21433

Edge-assignment determines the perception of relative depth across an edge and the shape of the closer side. Many cues determine edge-assignment, but relatively little is known about the neural mechanisms involved in combining these cues. Here, we ma... Read More about Cue Competition Affects Temporal Dynamics of Edge-assignment in Human Visual Cortex.

Is no praise good praise? Effects of positive feedback on children's and university students’ responses to subsequent failures (2011)
Journal Article
(2011). Is no praise good praise? Effects of positive feedback on children's and university students’ responses to subsequent failures. British Journal of Educational Psychology, 327 - 339. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.2044-8279.2011.02028.x

Background. According to Dweck and colleagues, praise can be delivered using person (‘you are clever') or process terms (‘you worked hard'). Research suggests that giving people process praise after success can help them deal better with subsequent f... Read More about Is no praise good praise? Effects of positive feedback on children's and university students’ responses to subsequent failures.

The role of reality monitoring in anosognosia for hemiplegia. (2011)
Journal Article
Roffe, & Edelstyn. (2011). The role of reality monitoring in anosognosia for hemiplegia. Behavioural Neurology, 241 - 243. https://doi.org/10.3233/BEN-2010-0305

Background: The aim was to assess the feasibility of a single-centre, single-blind, randomized, crossover design to explore the effects of two slow-release dopamine agonists, ropinirole and pramipexole, on cued recall in Parkinson’s disease. As the... Read More about The role of reality monitoring in anosognosia for hemiplegia..

Learning styles in the classroom: Educational benefit or planning exercise? (2010)
Journal Article
(2010). Learning styles in the classroom: Educational benefit or planning exercise?. Psychology Teaching Review, 67 -77

Differentiation of teaching is encouraged to accommodate student diversity. This study investigated whether using learning styles as a basis for differentiation improved A-level student performance, compared to differentiation on the basis of academi... Read More about Learning styles in the classroom: Educational benefit or planning exercise?.

'I don't think they knew we could do these sorts of things': social representations of community and participation in community arts by older people (2010)
Journal Article
(2010). 'I don't think they knew we could do these sorts of things': social representations of community and participation in community arts by older people. Journal of Health Psychology, 777 -785. https://doi.org/10.1177/1359105310368069

As people age the character of their social relationships change. There is evidence that older people who reside in disadvantaged communities often experience social isolation, which in turn has been found to be associated with a variety of health pr... Read More about 'I don't think they knew we could do these sorts of things': social representations of community and participation in community arts by older people.

Grouping puts figure-ground assignment in context by constraining propagation of edge assignment (2010)
Journal Article
Brooks. (2010). Grouping puts figure-ground assignment in context by constraining propagation of edge assignment. Attention, Perception, and Psychophysics, 1431- 1431. https://doi.org/10.3758/APP.72.5.1431

Figure-ground organization involves the assignment of edges to a figural shape on one or the other side of each dividing edge. Established visual cues for edge assignment primarily concern relatively local rather than contextual factors. In the prese... Read More about Grouping puts figure-ground assignment in context by constraining propagation of edge assignment.

Effect of disease severity and dopaminergic medication on recollection and familiarity in patients with idiopathic nondementing Parkinson's. (2009)
Journal Article
Edelstyn, N., Shepherd, T. A., Mayes, A. R., Sherman, S. M., & Ellis, S. J. (2010). Effect of disease severity and dopaminergic medication on recollection and familiarity in patients with idiopathic nondementing Parkinson's. Neuropsychologia, 48(5), 931 -938. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2009.12.039

The effect of disease severity and dopaminergic medication on the assessment of familiarity and the recollection of episodic details during recognition in nondementing idiopathic Parkinson's is uncertain. Some studies have reported familiarity as def... Read More about Effect of disease severity and dopaminergic medication on recollection and familiarity in patients with idiopathic nondementing Parkinson's..