The Department of Psychology offers 3 to 3.5 year PhD funding schemes and 1 year Master’s research degrees (full time or part time). These research degrees offer the unique opportunity to tackle research questions at the forefront of psychological science.
Students will be supervised by world-leading experts in their field of study and will be part of a thriving community of researchers within the department. Students are active members of their research groups and benefit from a large range of opportunities to present and discuss work with their colleagues in seminars and research workshops.
Research degrees are examined by writing a thesis and, in the case of a PhD, students undertake a viva (oral) examination. In addition to research work, students have the opportunity to undertake some teaching in order to gain valuable teaching experience. The university also offers a wide range of training and personal development courses. Students who are interested in undertaking post-graduate research are encouraged to approach members of staff within their field of interest to discuss and to develop potential research projects suitable for PhD or Master’s by research degrees.
The DDT Fellow will be entitled to a total of 42 months of stipend (UKRI value) and 12 months of salary at Grade 6 (£29,605) during the duration of the fellowship. How this time is divided will be agreed by the successful candidate and the Department.
Working arrangements: DDTFs normally last for four and a half years and comprise three and a half years of research and one year of teaching (1540 hours in total, based on a 35-hour week and a 44-week year). Teaching responsibilities are typically distributed across the first four years.
Preferred start date: Successful candidates will ideally be in post by 1 October 2024.
Application deadline: Wednesday, 31st July 2024, 11:59 pm.
For more information, please see: DDTF Ad July 2024
Here is a sample of some project ideas suggested by individual staff.
These are very much intended only as starting points - prospective students are also welcome to contact staff to discuss their own ideas for PhD or MRes projects - see our list of Staff and Research Groups.
Testing Bayesian inference models of perception
Learning new senses
Future proofing: Predictive processing in real-world scene viewing, understanding and memory
Human Echolocation - A window into human brain plasticity and sensory function
Visual perception difficulties after brain injury
Learning to see the 3D world
Dr Bruce Rawlings
Are children’s creativity and innovation influenced by where they grow up?
When do Female Role Models Help Women’s STEM Outcome?