Subject overview
Ranked in the top 10 in the UK in The Complete University Guide 2012-13 and The Sunday Times University Guide 2012, and 14th in the UK in The Guardian University Guide 2013.
Rated 12th (of 76 universities) in the UK for research in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). 95 per cent of our research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and 60 per cent rated as internationally excellent or higher.
We are one of the largest psychology units in the UK with almost 40 teaching faculty, as well as a large community of postdoctoral researchers and graduate students. This provides an intellectually stimulating and supportive environment for postgraduate research and study.
We have excellent facilities with newly refurbished office and laboratory space at the centre of the Sussex campus.
We are able to offer supervision across a broad range of areas encompassed by our four research groups:
- Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience
- Cognitive Psychology
- Developmental and Clinical Psychology, and
- Social and Applied Psychology.
We have strong collaborative links with the School of Life Sciences and the Department of Informatics as well as with the Brighton and Sussex Medical School.
Specialist facilities
The School has well-equipped labs for carrying out research in all its main areas of interest, and links with local schools and hospitals that greatly facilitate research, for example, on cognitive development and cognitive neuroscience. Psychologists share the use of the Clinical Imaging Sciences Centre (MRI and PET/CT) with the Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS).
We have excellent lab facilities in cognition, developmental psychology, feeding and drinking, human psychophysiology, psychoacoustics, psychopharmacology, social psychology, and vision. Our Human Psychophysiology Laboratory houses EEG/ERP and TMS equipment, as well as eye-trackers and GSR facilities. The Human Psychopharmacology Unit has facilities for the study of alcohol and nicotine use, and for research into eating behaviour. There is a dedicated unit for the laboratory study of rodents.
Specially converted rooms are available for the observation of children and group interactions. Most rooms are audio-, video- and data-linked, and a number have built-in one-way observation screens. There is an excellent range of audiovisual equipment, particularly for video recording, analysis and editing.
Programmes
- PhD in Psychology
- MPhil in Psychology
The School of Psychology has a thriving community of research students who enjoy excellent facilities. At any time we have 50 or more students studying for research degrees. They come from a wide variety of backgrounds and countries and make a major contribution to the life of the School.
You will be working in a highly rated research-active school. You will have a desk in a shared office, a networked computer with internet access, and technical support for your research.
We offer excellent supervision in all areas of psychology in which School faculty specialise, and train students for academic and research careers. If you are interested in applying for a self-funded place, the first step is to contact potential supervisors in our research groups to see if any of them would be interested in your proposed area of research.
Research course structure
There are two modes of entry for research students. Most students enter directly into a PhD. Others spend one year taking a Masters qualification followed by three years studying for a PhD (known as 1+3). The University and most of the Research Councils support the first mode of entry, and may provide funding for between three and four years. The ESRC supports 1+3 for most of its funded students. The 1+3 mode is also particularly suited to candidates whose background does not equip them to embark immediately on a doctorate. Refer to Research.
Students who are not taking a Masters qualification will also be expected to undertake methods training and their needs will be assessed before they begin their research degree.
Entry requirements
- MPhil in Psychology
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UK entrance requirements
A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in psychology or a closely related discipline such as neuroscience or sociology.
Overseas entrance requirements
Please refer to column A in Overseas qualifications.
English language requirements
IELTS 7.0, with not less than 6.5 in each section. Internet TOEFL with 95 overall, with at least 22 in Listening, 23 in Reading, 23 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.
For more information, refer to English language requirements.
- PhD in Psychology
-
UK entrance requirements
A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in psychology or a closely related discipline such as neuroscience or sociology.
Overseas entrance requirements
Please refer to column A in Overseas qualifications.
English language requirements
IELTS 7.0, with not less than 6.5 in each section. Internet TOEFL with 95 overall, with at least 22 in Listening, 23 in Reading, 23 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.
For more information, refer to English language requirements.
Visas and immigration
Find out more about Visas and immigration.
For more information about the admissions process at Sussex
For pre-application enquiries:
Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
For post-application enquiries:
Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk
Related subject
Fees and funding
Fees
- MPhil in Psychology
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Home UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £16,20031 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
- PhD in Psychology
-
Home UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £16,20031 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
To find out about your fee status, living expenses and other costs, visit further financial information.
Funding
The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree.
To find out more about funding and part-time work, visit further financial information.
Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Postgraduate Study (2013)
Region: UK
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 1 October 2013
The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Postgraduate students following any postgraduate degree courses in any subject.
Faculty interests
- Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience
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The Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience research group has interests in:
- the application of basic neuroscience and behavioural techniques in rodents to study the neural bases of drug addiction
- the application of human psychopharmacology techniques to explore the detailed effects of drugs on human behaviour and cognition, as well as both preclinical and clinical investigations of the cognitive and other psychological deficits associated with long-term use of drugs such as ecstasy and alcohol
- the neurobiology of motivation, with specialist interests in the control of ingestion, and
- the cognitive neuroscience of human memory and attention, and especially research on deficits associated with disorders such as dementia and schizophrenia.
There is a close inter-relationship between animal, human and clinical work. On the animal side, the Sussex group is one of the strongest groups in any UK university for the behavioural characterisation of transgenic mice, and enjoys collaborative links with molecular geneticists, with the neighbouring Sussex Centre for Neuroscience and with the Brighton and Sussex Medical School (BSMS). On both the human and the animal side, the group has long-standing links with clinical health professionals across the county.
Professor Pete Clifton How brain systems regulate feeding behaviour, side effects of antipsychotic drugs on body weight.
Dr Hans Crombag Neurobiological and behavioural mechanisms of appetitive learning and memory, contextual learning processes in relapse.
Professor Theodora Duka Alcohol and nicotine addiction: human studies of conditioning, adaptive mechanisms.
Dr Sarah King Techniques to investigate the mechanisms underlying the effects of stress and drugs on brain and behaviour.
Dr Eisuke Koya Neuronal ensembles, associative learning, obesity, addiction, synaptic physiology, immunohistochemistry.
Dr Michael Morgan Substance misuse, impulse control in adolescence and adulthood, psychopathology in substance misusers.
Dr Tamzin Ripley Changes in neuronal plasticity, using behavioural and electrophysiological techniques, and its role in drug abuse.
Professor Jennifer Rusted Psychopharma-cology of human memory, prospective and action-based memory in ageing and dementia.
Professor David Stephens Neurobiological and behavioural mechanisms underlying drug dependence.
Professor Martin Yeomans Appetite control, development of food preferences, dieting as a model of disordered eating and obesity.
- Cognitive Psychology
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This Cognitive Psychology group has interests in:
- learning and memory, especially implicit learning (including computational simulations of learning), awareness of knowledge states, memory and consciousness
- language and communication, especially the behavioural, cognitive and neuropsychological processes involved in language comprehension and production. Our specialty fields include psycholinguistics, specifically pronoun interpretation, text comprehension, children’s difficulties in text comprehension, and fMRI
- vision and visual perception, where we have particular expertise in visual cognition and attention, face processing, perceptual aspects of driving, perception and action, perception of movement, and the perception of visual art
- the interaction between perceptual processes and other aspects of cognition, as revealed by the methods of cognitive neuroscience, especially multi-sensory interactions including synaesthesia, the cognitive deficits associated with neurological disorders, and the role of attention and working memory in oculomotor control, and
- animal vocal communication and cognition, where we have particular expertise in using playback experiments to tackle questions about communication and cognitive abilities in large terrestrial mammals (elephants, red deer, lions) and non-passerine birds (gulls and owls).
We have expertise in the use of specialised technology including acoustic playback, eye tracking, speech analysis and brain imaging. The Clinical Sciences Imaging Centre houses a 1.5T Siemens MRI scanner and PET/CT, and is used particularly by a number of members of this group.
The Human Psychophysiology Laboratory is extensively used by this group and includes EEG/ERP equipment, TMS, and eye-trackers.
Dr Chris Bird Cognitive processes through comparing the performance of brain-damaged adults with neurologically healthy controls.
Professor Zoltan Dienes How people acquire knowledge they are not aware of having, computational modelling of such learning.
Professor Alan Garnham Language comprehension, particularly inference; sentence processing; reasoning; mental models theory.
Dr Graham Hole Face recognition, age perception from faces, perceptual aspects of driving (especially ‘looked but failed to see’ accidents).
Dr Ryota Kanai Neural processes and computational principles underlying subjective conscious experiences and qualia, the anatomical and functional neural basis of perceptual and cognitive phenomena.
Dr Beena Khurana Visual cognition, the role of attention in motion perception, processing of human faces.
Dr Karen McComb Mammal communication and cognition, functional questions about animal communication and the nature of animal minds.
Dr Romi Nijhawan Compensation of neural delays in perception and action, flash-lag effect in vision and action.
Professor Jane Oakhill Mental models theory of text comprehension and reasoning, and children’s text comprehension.
Dr David Reby Vocal communication, sexual communication, crossmodal abilities in non-human animals.
Dr Jamie Ward Human cognitive neuroscience using neuropsychology, fMRI, TMS and EEG. Visit Synaesthesia research.
- Developmental and Clinical Psychology
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The Development and Clinical Psychology research group has a common aim of advancing theoretical approaches to human development and clinical psychology, often through studying applied questions. Approaches include observational and experimental studies, longitudinal analyses of child development, comparative perspectives, dynamic systems, neural network modelling, and experimental clinical psychopathology. We work closely with clinicians and educationalists, and with typical and special child populations.
Research focuses on six broad themes:
- social development, family and peer relations
- using technology to study and support peer collaboration and cognitive change
- emotional adjustment across the lifespan
- the aetiology of emotional disorders
- gesture and communication, and
- word learning and early cognitive development.
We have several focused labs: Child Anxiety Theory and Treatment (CATT) Lab, Children and Technology (ChaT) Lab, Sussex Family Research Lab, and Word and Object Reasoning Development (WORD) Lab.
The group is well-supported with lab facilities, including testing rooms for audio-visual recording, software for video editing and analyses, questionnaire scanning facilities, environments for conducting controlled experimental psychopathology studies, and specialised spaces for conducting a range of studies from habituation to clinical interviews. The group has good links with local daycare, schools and colleges.
Professor Robin Banerjee Social and emotional development of pupils, self-conscious cognition and emotion, self-presentational behaviour.
Dr Kate Cavanagh Cognitive biases and reasoning processes in the emotional disorders, increasing access to psychological therapies.
Professor Graham Davey Experimental psychopathology and anxiety disorders, the causes of perseverative psychopathologies.
Professor Andy Field The role of childhood experience in fear acquisition, parenting and child anxiety.
Dr Anna Franklin The development of colour perception and cognition, broader issues in cognitive and developmental science.
Dr Jessica Horst Cognitive development in children under the age of five; language acquisition, infant and toddler categorisation.
Dr David Leavens Non-verbal communication by apes and humans, joint attention, mother-infant interaction, evolution of language.
Dr Bonamy Oliver Child behaviour, using longitudinal, behavioural genetic designs to better understand family and other environmental influences on behavioural outcomes.
Dr Alison Pike Antecedents and consequences of variation in family relationship quality, including marital, parent-child and sibling.
Dr Nicola Yuill Typical and atypical social cognitive development, autism; technology to support children; children’s language development.
- Social and Applied Psychology
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The Social and Applied Psychology research group has interests in five broad areas:
- behaviour change: intervention, design and evaluation
- health psychology
- identity, culture and well-being
- intergroup relations and collective behaviour
- pro-social and moral engagement.
The group has good facilities for laboratory-based research involving video recording of individual and group behaviour, and for conducting online experiments. Links also exist with local schools and hospitals for conducting field research.
Dr Rod Bond Group processes, particularly social influence and reaction to deviants; subjective well-being.
Professor Rupert Brown Intergroup relations: prejudice and prejudice reduction, acculturation processes, hate crime, collective guilt.
Dr Richard de Visser Young people’s health behaviour, sexual health and sexual behaviour, gender and health-related behaviour.
Dr Helga Dittmar Social and psychological dimensions of material goods, compulsive buying; sociocultural influences on body image.
Dr John Drury Crowd behaviour, empowerment and positive psychological change, crowding/density, celebration and ‘atmosphere’.
Dr Tom Farsides Factors that facilitate (duty or empathy) or inhibit (moral phobia or selfishness) positive other-concern.
Professor Peter Harris Cognitive, emotional and behavioural response to risk, especially health risks.
Dr Donna Jessop Impact of personally relevant health-risk information on behaviour change, fear appeals.
Dr Karen Long Inter- and intragroup relations, social identity theory, social and personal identity as sources of self-esteem.
Dr Paul Sparks Attitude theory applied to environmental and health issues: normative influences and self-identity, decision-making.
Dr Viv Vignoles Self and identity, motivational processes and culture and context influences on identity construction; life transitions.
For more detailed information, visit the School of Psychology.
Careers and perspectives
Our graduates have gone on to careers in research and education, and hold roles including behavioural scientist, lecturer, researcher, scientist, health psychologist, and statistician.
For more information, visit Careers and alumni.
School and contacts
School of Psychology
The School of Psychology is one of the largest centres for the study of psychology in the UK, with an academic community of nearly 900 people working in a rich and supportive learning environment.
School of Psychology,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9QH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 876638
E psychology@sussex.ac.uk
School of Psychology
Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions
You’re welcome to attend one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions. These are held in the spring and summer terms and enable you to find out more about postgraduate study and the opportunities Sussex has to offer.
Visit Discover Postgraduate study to book your place.
Other ways to visit Sussex
We run weekly guided campus tours every Wednesday afternoon, year round. Book a place online at Visit us and Open Days.
You are also welcome to visit the University independently without any pre-arrangement.
