In two weeks time I’m off to Limerick to attend the Congress of Psychology Students – this is an annual event where undergraduate and postgraduate psychology students (and sometimes their supervisors) present the research that they have conducted, usually in the last year or two. At this event two years ago I presented my own research, and plan on doing so once again at next year’s congress.
The congress is a wonderful opportunity to gather information about the current direction of Irish psychological research and based on the information from the timetable for presentations it appears that the majority of the research to be presented is coming from the traditional mainstream topics of scientific psychology. From almost 200 presentations taking place only about 10 of these are related to I.T in some way, which personally is a big disappointment, especially considering the ubiquity of communications technologies in Ireland and the number of I.T companies based here.
Applying psychological studies to technology has always been a niche in this country, which is surprising because it has so many positive and negative impacts upon Irish working life, home life, education etc. It is something that I feel passionately about, especially the importance of applying scientific methods to research in I.T – rather than the current climate of unreliable surveys and the media shaping public knowledge and ideas about how we use and interact with one another through technology.
I did however note an increase in the areas of research related to gay men and lesbians (though it is still a tiny percentage of the 200 presentations). There are of course many other areas of research that I have an interest in and below is a list of the selected presentations which I will aiming to attend.
9am Eoin Golden (NUIG) Undergraduate: Same-Sex Affection in Public: A Qualitative Study.
9.15 Sarah Kilroy (TCD) Undergraduate: Personality, rape myth beliefs and prejudiced instructions: Effects on decisions of guilt in a case of date rape.
9.30 Maccon-Fionn Macnamara (NUIG) Undergraduate: The role of attentional bias in emotional vulnerability.
9.45 Caroline Bergin-McLoughlin (NUIM) Undergraduate: Investigating the Effects of Brain Training on Spatial Memory.
10.00 Niamh Hanrahan (IADT) Undergraduate: The Effect of Humour in Advertising Stimuli on Attitude towards the Ad (Aad) and Purchase Intention (PI).
10.15 Miriam O’Gorman (MIC) Undergraduate: Background Music: a help or a hindrance?
11.00 Deirdre Delaney (UCD) Undergraduate: An assessment of quality of life in adults over 65 Years in Ireland and its relationship to anxiety and depression.
11.15 Mary Christina Joyce (UCC) Undergraduate: Gender Differences and Course Differences in Internet Attitudes amongst an Irish University Sample.
11.30 Sandra von Bergen (IADT) Undergraduate: Comparing the effectiveness of e-learning to the presentation method of teaching in a college setting.
11.45 Michael Malone (IADT) Undergraduate: The physiological correlates of ‘Flow’ states within an I.T. environment.
12.00 Anne O’ Donoghue (UCD) Undergraduate: Language and Cognition: A Study of Grammatical Gender Effects.
12.15 Claire O Driscoll (NUIG) Postgraduate: Factors influencing psychological well being and treatment outcome of couples planning or receiving in-vitro fertilisation (IVF): A self regulatory model perspective.
14.00 Ellen Brady (UCD) Undergraduate: Social Support on the Internet: A Qualitative Analysis of an Irish Parenting Website.
14.15 Geraldine Campion (MIC) Undergraduate: The potential of the dynamic medium of video instruction using the cognitive architecture of the Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning.
14.30 Colin Gallagher (IADT) Undergraduate: CHI 2008 The iPod Generation, Living in Musical Isolation?
14.30 Eoin Pluinceid (TCD) (Undergraduate): Client Satisfaction and Perception of Alliance in Online Asynchronous Counseling in a University Setting: An Exploratory Study.
14.45 Anna Burke (NUIM) Undergraduate: “Body Image, Psychosocial Well-being and Risky Sexual Behaviour: An Investigation Among Gay Men”.
15.00 Sarah Halpin (AMCD) Undergraduate: The Effects of Verbalisation on Object Recognition.
15.15 Ms Katrice Sheridan & Dr Tim Trimble (TCD) Postgraduate: Services and Supports used by Students to obtain Information about a Further Education College.
16.00 Clair O’Connor (UCC) Undergaduate: “That’s going on Bebo”: An examiniation of the relationship between Bebo use and self-reported global self esteem in Cork University students.
16.15 Áine O’ Callaghan (NUIG) Undergraduate: The Associations among Old-fashioned and Modern Prejudice and the Individual Difference Variables of Extrinsic/Intrinsic Motivation, Social Dominance Orientation, Right-wing Authoritarianism, and the Protestant Work Ethic.
16.45 Alan Forrey (MIC) Undergraduate: Sex differences in attitudes to gay men and lesbians: an Irish perspective.
17.00 Lisa Gorry, Tim Mc Nichols, Gráinne Kirwan (IADT) Undergraduate: Employers’ Implicit Theories of Intelligence
in the Recruitment of Individuals with Asperger’s Syndrome.
[...] I returned late last night from the Psychology Student Congress held in Mary Immaculate College in Limerick and I must say – I really enjoyed myself. I found Limerick to be a vibrant, clean and enjoyable city. I tried to see as many IT related presentations as I could and the highlight for me was from Michael Malone, an undergraduate Psychology Applied to IT student from IADT. Below is his abstract, taken from “The Irish Psychologist” Vol. 34, no.9 – I’ve also added some relevant web-links. The Physiological Correlates of “Flow” States Within an IT Environment Since the initial conception of the “Flow” construct a vast amount of psychological research has focused on identifying its key subjective components and investigating its supposed association with elevating human performance capacity (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990). However, the most distinguishable characteristic of this research is its complete dependency on qualitative research methods. There has been no research conducted thus far investigating the molecular concomitants of flow states. For this study 8 participants (6 males, 2 females) were requested to play a videogame (Flow TM) which was specifically designed to induce flow states (Chen, 2006). Heart rate and electro-dermal activity (EDA) were recorded during game play. An adapted FSS-2 (Flow State Scale Revised) questionnaire was then administered to measure flow levels experienced during gameplay. It is anticipated that the molecular activity associated with increased Flow levels will resemble that of deep meditation (i.e, decreases in both heart rate and skin conductance) due to their similarly described subjective state (Marr, 2001). Analysis of results is pending. Results will be discussed with reference to the methodological challenges facing future flow research and possible benefits derived from such research. [...]
[...] of antiquated web design!) therefore I cannot access information on all of the awards from the Psychology Congress. But, I did want to mention the work by Colin Gallagher, a final year student from IADT (Psychology [...]