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Australian State/Territory : WA
Field of Research : Psychology
Australian State/Territory : NSW
Research Topic : Biological Control
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  • Funded Activity

    Linkage Projects - Grant ID: LP110200562

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $299,200.00
    Summary
    Attentional and conditioning mechanisms that mediate overcoming anxiety. Anxiety is a common emotion for most Australians that can cause substantial costs for individuals and society. This project uses dominant psychological models to identify critical mechanisms that are believed to predict capacity for, and change in, anxiety. Outcomes substantially advance knowledge about how humans overcome anxiety.
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    Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP210101827

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $506,237.00
    Summary
    To focus on pain or not to focus: WHEN is the question. The experience of pain is a ubiquitous experience, and persistent pain is common and causes enormous personal and societal burden. Anyone who has been in severe pain will understand that pain captures attention, but the role that attention plays in increasing pain perception is poorly understood. This project will test a new conceptual model that calls for a change in the paradigm underlying research into attention and pain. We will use nov .... To focus on pain or not to focus: WHEN is the question. The experience of pain is a ubiquitous experience, and persistent pain is common and causes enormous personal and societal burden. Anyone who has been in severe pain will understand that pain captures attention, but the role that attention plays in increasing pain perception is poorly understood. This project will test a new conceptual model that calls for a change in the paradigm underlying research into attention and pain. We will use novel experimental tasks in virtual reality environments to address these important gaps in our knowledge. The project will significantly advance our fundamental understanding of the role of attention in pain perception and pave the way for translational research to reduce the substantial burden pain causes.
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    Active Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP200102346

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $171,196.00
    Summary
    Moving from assumptions to new learning. . Moving from assumptions to new learning. The project aims to investigate the processes that drive new learning by using automatically evoked brain responses to examine when new information triggers the brain to update beliefs about the world. The project will generate new knowledge on the maturity of this process at birth, how it declines with older age and the brain areas critical to the process. The outcomes will provide insight into how attentio .... Moving from assumptions to new learning. . Moving from assumptions to new learning. The project aims to investigate the processes that drive new learning by using automatically evoked brain responses to examine when new information triggers the brain to update beliefs about the world. The project will generate new knowledge on the maturity of this process at birth, how it declines with older age and the brain areas critical to the process. The outcomes will provide insight into how attentional resources are automatically marshalled when beliefs are challenged, and it will help identify the consequences for learning when a system is immature, or the process breaks down with increasing age.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP160103160

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $453,000.00
    Summary
    Intergenerational Prediction of Social and Early Emotional Development. This project aims to investigate multi-generational influences on child psychosocial development. It plans to take advantage of a not-to-be-repeated opportunity to follow offspring born to one of Australia’s oldest longitudinal studies of social and emotional development. The Australian Temperament Project has followed around 2000 parents and offspring across 30 years from birth in 1983. Third-generation babies have been fol .... Intergenerational Prediction of Social and Early Emotional Development. This project aims to investigate multi-generational influences on child psychosocial development. It plans to take advantage of a not-to-be-repeated opportunity to follow offspring born to one of Australia’s oldest longitudinal studies of social and emotional development. The Australian Temperament Project has followed around 2000 parents and offspring across 30 years from birth in 1983. Third-generation babies have been followed across the peak period of first births to females. This project plans to continue recruitment across the peak period of first births for males in 2016–18. This would create one of the most extensive and well-powered three-generation resources worldwide, yielding unique data on intergenerational pathways through mother and father lines. It expects to inform targeting of interventions and psychosocial resources to promote wellbeing within and across generations.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP130101459

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $961,888.00
    Summary
    Preconception predictors of early childhood social and emotional development: a 30-year longitudinal study of grandparents, parents and children. There is increasing recognition of the importance of preconception pathways in shaping the family environments that parents provide for their children. This project will advance understandings of preconception pathways to healthy early child development, by recruiting offspring born to a 30-year longitudinal study: The Australian Temperament Study.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP150101540

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $443,900.00
    Summary
    The emotional face: Effects on orienting, visual search, and categorization. The processing of facial expressions of emotion is essential for successful social functioning however our understanding of how these important signals are processed and of the factors which may impede appropriate processing is lacking. Using a range of converging methodologies drawn from neuroscience, social, and cognitive psychology, this project aims to advance our understanding of the processing of the expressions o .... The emotional face: Effects on orienting, visual search, and categorization. The processing of facial expressions of emotion is essential for successful social functioning however our understanding of how these important signals are processed and of the factors which may impede appropriate processing is lacking. Using a range of converging methodologies drawn from neuroscience, social, and cognitive psychology, this project aims to advance our understanding of the processing of the expressions of two central social emotions, happiness and anger, by delineating the conditions that support or limit it in the general population. This research aims to provide an invaluable knowledge base for subsequent applied research into deficits of emotional expression processing such as occur in autism, anxiety, or old age.
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    Funded Activity

    Discovery Projects - Grant ID: DP110101266

    Funder
    Australian Research Council
    Funding Amount
    $422,000.00
    Summary
    Memory consolidation - Integrating cognitive science and neuroscience approaches to how we remember and how we forget. How can we forget what happened yesterday, but vividly remember our first kiss? Neuroscientists think the brain has a special mechanism to strengthen memories with time, but many psychologists disagree. The project aims to bring the brain and the mind closer together, using the cutting-edge combination of brain imaging and psychological modelling.
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    Showing 1-7 of 7 Funded Activites

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