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)