Dr Jeremy Tree
Associate Professor. {joined 2008}Jeremy is interested in face processing impairments as a consequence of brain injury (neuropsychology) and exploring the limits of individual differences in the general population.Email: j.tree {at} swansea.ac.ukDr Ruth Horry
Senior Lecturer. {joined 2014}Ruth is interested in how people make recognition judgments about unfamiliar faces, particularly in legal contexts such as eyewitness identification procedures. Email: r.horry {at} swansea.ac.uk Dr Alex Jones
Lecturer. {joined 2016}Alex is interested in the role of the face as a signalling system in interpersonal interaction. He uses a range of computational approaches to understand how faces are perceived and appraised by others.Email: alex.l.jones {at} swansea.ac.ukTwitter: @alexjonesphdDr John Towler
Lecturer. {joined 2016}John is interested in how the mind and brain work, and how brain function can break down or develop atypically. He primarily employs EEG to record brain activity, and experimental psychological methods to study behaviour.Email: j.l.towler {at} swansea.ac.ukDr Jodie Davies-Thompson
Lecturer. {joined 2018}Jodie is interested in improving face recognition and rehabilitation of prosopagnosia, as well as how the brain responds to faces, and the ability of the brain to change.Email: j.davies-thompson {at} swansea.ac.uk Personal websiteDaniel Morgan
PhD candidate. Dan is interested in face training in acquired and congenital prosopagnosia, as well as emotion training in alexithymia.Email: Chithra Kannan
PhD candidate. Chithra is interested in face and emotion processing in individuals with alexithymia, autism, and prosopagnosia, and how people identify personality from faces. Email: 842590 {at} swansea.ac.uk Jeanne Childs
PhD candidate. Jeanne is interested in evolutionary facial perception, examining the links between facial features and attributes such as attractiveness, as well as how autism traits affect emotion recognition. Email: 929493 {at} swansea.ac.uk