Kay Standing
Humanities and Social Science
Humanities and Social Science
Find out more about the Liverpool Screen School's courses. When you join Liverpool Screen School you'll not only study on a cutting-edge programme, which has been informed by current research and contemporary, industry-relevant issues, but you'll also be welcomed into a vibrant learning community.
See our full results and more detail about LJMU Research on our Research Impact Hub pages. On these pages, we showcase how research has an impact – in our teaching, in our city region and in the values our university lives by.
LJMU has an exchange programme with Southern Connecticut State University. Find out how you can study for a semester in an American University.
The Teaching Informed Research project aims to develop a new collaborative alignment between teaching and research in creative disciplines, in which teaching informs research.
In the Brain and Behaviour Research Group within RISES, we study human motor behaviour from the neural level through to perception and cognition. Our two main areas of research are sensorimotor neuroscience and expert performance and learning.
See the Liverpool Business School's courses. Thanks to our outstanding, professionally-focused courses and our expert academics, you will graduate with the skills and experience you need to go from the seminar room to the boardroom.
From specially designed studio spaces to award-winning buildings, the Liverpool School of Art and Design has a range of first-rate facilities for students and staff. Find out about the facilities we have to offer.
As a graduate from the School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment a wide variety of career opportunities could be open to you. Find out what careers you could secure and how, through placements and events, the School will help boost your employability.
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.