Academic staff

Dr Georgina Bartlett
bartleg2@lsbu.ac.uk
Psychology
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1573-9556 (unauthenticated)
108
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I gained my BSc in psychology at Royal Holloway before continuing my studies at Royal Holloway with an MSc in Forensic psychology. Subsequently, I completed my PhD at London South Bank University in 2020.
I then joined LSBU’s Simulation for Digital Health programme as an applied research fellow, where I engaged in testing and evaluation of digital health innovations for start-ups and SMEs. I joined the Division of Psychology as a lecturer in September 2021.
My research interests lay in forensic psychology, in particular how alcohol consumption affects eyewitness memory. My research is interested not only in whether a sober witness is more reliable, but also in whether people are more likely to perceive such a witness as more reliable.
In addition, I am interested in the effects of alcohol intoxication on behaviour and cognition in forensically related contexts.
Courses taught
Psychology - MSc
Psychology - BSc (Hons)
Royal Holloway University of London
Royal Holloway University of London
London South Bank University
Proposal | Project | Role | Funder | Status | Status last updated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Doppel-FiMT bid | Doppel | Co-Investigator | Forces in Mind Trust | OPEN Submitted | Aug 2022 |
Individual differences in selective attentional bias for healthy and unhealthy food-related stimuli and social identity as a vegan/vegetarian dissociate “healthy” and “unhealthy” orthorexia nervosa.
Albery, I., Shove, E., Bartlett, G., Frings, D. and Spada, M. (2022). Individual differences in selective attentional bias for healthy and unhealthy food-related stimuli and social identity as a vegan/vegetarian dissociate “healthy” and “unhealthy” orthorexia nervosa. Appetite. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.appet.2022.106261
The effects of alcohol and co-witness information on memory reports: A field study
Bartlett, G., Albery, I.P, Frings, D. and Gawrylowicz, J. (2022). The effects of alcohol and co-witness information on memory reports: A field study. Psychopharmacology.
The intoxicated co-witness: effects of alcohol and dyadic discussion on memory conformity and event recall.
Bartlett, G., Gawrylowicz, Julie, Frings, Daniel and Albery, Ian P (2021). The intoxicated co-witness: effects of alcohol and dyadic discussion on memory conformity and event recall. Psychopharmacology. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00213-021-05776-0