Recently, several FCRG members, along with past and present students, attended and presented at the 2022 Division of Forensic Psychology (DFP) annual conference in Solihull (14-16th June 2022). A host of oral and poster presentations, across a wide range of topics, were presented over the course of the event. Here’s a run down of them below:
POSTER PRESENTATIONS
Isobel Corfield (current MSc student) | ‘Dacryphilia and its Affiliations’ |
Elizabeth Deehan (PhD student) | ‘Using online viewing time measures to understand somnophilic sexual interests’ |
Matthew King-Parker (PhD student) | ‘The Validation of the Burglary Scripts Assessment’ |
Georgia Harries (graduate) and Tochs Onwuegbusi | ‘To replicate or conceal? Creating fairer line-ups for multiple suspects with dissimilar distinctive features’ |
Megan Hartley (current MSc student) | ‘Public perception of men who have committed infrafamilial and extrafamilial sexual offences against children’ (published paper) |
Roshini Sahsan-Stock (graduate) and Tochs Onwuegbusi | ‘Impact of risk assessment, media and offender’s characteristics on lay people’s fairness in judgement of terrorist offenders’ |
Phil Willmot | ‘Risk assessment with racially minoritised clients’ |
ORAL PRESENTATIONS
Rachael Dagnall (with Nic Bowes & Sophie Ellis) | ‘Decolonising Forensic Psychology: An interactive workshop’ |
Phil Willmot | ‘Why we need to stop talking about trauma: Thinking systemically about threat, safety and connection’ |
Michelle Smith | ‘Systematic review of professional boundaries on risk in forensic secure settings: process learning and preliminary results’ |
Matt King-Parker (PhD student) | ‘Re-enacting burglary scripts in virtual reality’ |
Leah Stainsby (graduate) & Tochs Onwuegbusi | ‘Impact or risk assessment and offender characteristics on lay people’s fairness in judgement and sentencing of violent offenders’ |
Abbie Chambers (graduate) and Michelle Smith | ‘The relationship between dual role conflict & stress in staff working with forensic clients: An exploratory study’ |
Bethan Harcourt (graduate) and Michelle Smith | Public perceptions of adolescents engaged in violent extremism |
Karolina Wojcik (current MSc student) | ‘The Function of sexual fantasies and their relationship with developmental factors’ (part of a symposium convened by Ross Bartels) |
Courteney Ferguson (current MSc student) | ‘Exhibitionism proclivity, sexual fantasy functions, and primary human goods’ (part of a symposium convened by Ross Bartels) |
Elizabeth Deehan (PhD student) | ‘Somnophilia: Attraction to a Sleep State or Specific Behaviours?’ (part of a symposium convened by Ross Bartels) |