Corporate Award - Tate Liverpool
Read the oration for Tate Liverpool for the presentation of their Corporate Award of Liverpool John Moores University.
Read the oration for Tate Liverpool for the presentation of their Corporate Award of Liverpool John Moores University.
The Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour has dedicated facilities including: EEG, psychophysiology, appetite research and neuroscience microneurography laboratories plus experimental testing booths and a sleep-over rest room. We also share a number of facilities with other science departments within the University.
Discover the Knowledge Transfer Partnership project that LJMU worked on with Prozone Sports.
Find out more about the university's commitment and approach to removing barriers for students to access and succeed in higher education.
Have you studied in higher education before? Learn about the funding options available to you as a returning student at LJMU.
Find out more about the history of the School and College of Commerce.
Alex is the Co-founder and Director of Liverpool Arts Bar on Hope Street and in the Baltic Triangle, founded with the ethos of supporting and developing grassroots artists across the city, giving them a platform to showcase and celebrate their work. Along with three fellow LJMU graduates, they opened the bar in 2019, survived the Covid-19 pandemic and can now boast that they have the city’s go-to venues for creatives.
The Doctoral Academy is committed to ensuring a high quality research training environment for postgraduate research students.
Last month staff were given access to Office 365. This resource includes web based versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint.
Within the Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour we are involved in research which looks at perception, attention, emotion, learning and memory, sensory and motor processes, and includes animal models of neurobehavioral research. We investigate cognitive and brain mechanisms in psychologically and neurologically intact animals and humans, and the disruption of these processes caused by drugs, brain damage, ageing or atypical development.