Description | Press releases from British Psychological Society Annual Conference held 1 - 4 April 1995, University of Warwick Includes professional skills workshops. DCP Division of Clinical Psychology Conference and Student Members Group Conference held in parallel.
List of delegates, social programme, BPs meetings schedule, and speakers, papers, abstracts, programme for Annual Conference and DCP Conference.
General press release about conferences 1. What Young People Think About Smoking (Kate Gillen) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'The Causes of Smoking: What Do Young People Think' 2. Missing The Occasional Meal is OK (Mike Green) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Does Missing A Meal Affect Cognitive Function?'; 3.Disgusting! - Psychologists Find Out Why (Karen Barker, Graham Davey) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Disgusting A Factor Analysis of Disgust Elicitators'; 4. Bully for Them (Mike Eslea) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Attitudes Towards Bullying in Primary School Pupils and Parents'; 6. Temazepan Can Kill (Richard Hammersley) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers of Psychobiology Section symposium 'Psychoactive Drugs Use and Abuse'; 7. Eye Witnesses Exaggerate Under Hypnosis (Mark Kebbel) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'The Effects of Variability of Answers and Task Instructions on Eyewitness Memory'; 8. Better Quality Parenting for Children Conceived Via Reproductive Technology (Rachel Cook)- contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Patenting and Child Development in Families Created by the New Reproductive Technologies'; 9. Promoting Healthier Behaviour (Charles Abraham)- press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers given at symposium 'Understanding and Promoting Adolescent Health'; 10. Parental Divorce Can Lead to Development Problems in Young People (Martin Richards) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers read at 'Parenting Variations: Social, Emotional and Gender Development of Children' symposium; 11. Breast Implants - to Keep or Not To Keep (Eileen Bradbury) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'The Impact of Adverse Media Publicity on Women Who Have Had Breast Implants'; 12. Women and Men - Why The Differences? (John Archer) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers at Social Psychology Section symposium 'Sex Differences in Social Behaviour'; 13. Exclusion from Secondary Schools (Andre Imich) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers given at 'Exclusions from School: The Who, the Why, the Wherefore' symposium; 14. Pain in Childbirth (Catherin Niven) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Childbirth'; 15. The Foetus As An Active Participant (Peter Hepper) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract of paper 'Pregnancy: Building For The Future'; 16. Call For More Widespread Use of Video Testimony (Glenn Williams) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Video Testimony in Criminal Trials: Children and Other Vulnerable Witnesses'; 17. Being Sexually Abused Does Make You More Likely To Develop An Eating Disorder (Rachel Calam) press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Eating Disorders and Unwanted Sexual Experience: UK, Australian and US /data'; 18. The Treatment of Choice for Menopausal Hot Flushes (Myra Hunter) -press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Menopause and Midlife'; 19. Addicted To The Future? (Mark Griffiths) press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper 'Technological Addictions: A New Area of Psychological Study;' 20. Pet Owners Are More Likely To Be Type A Personalities -contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of papers given at symposium 'Theoretical and Practical Implications of Person-Pet Personalities'; 21. Suffering in Silence: Women's Experiences of Menopausal Hot Flushes (Frances Reynolds) - press release, contact and coverage sheet, abstract and summary of paper; 22. Values, Ethics and Psychology (Geoff Lindsay) - Presidential Address - press release Division of Clinical Psychology Conference Press releases 1. Psychological Treatment for Childhood Asthma (Sheila Park, Susan Sawyer) 2. British Psychologists Discover American Personality disorder (John Davis, Marcia Davis) 3. The Characteristics of Child Sex Abusers (Grace McClurg) 4. Psychology and Pain Control (Adrian Skinner) 5. Doctors May Wrongly Diagnose Persistent Vegetative States (Lesley Murphy)
Background Information: 1. Media Effects on Behaviour: Current Opinion, Present Evidence and Future Directions 2. I'd Known Him Anywhere (Dan Wright and Anne McDaid) 3. British Clinical Psychologists' Sexual Experiences With Their Clients (Tanya Garrett) 4. Women on the Outside: Prisoners' Partners Suffering (Maggie Minter and Lorn Champion);
See also BPS/001/6/01/02/01/01 for Programme and Abstracts of Annual Conference PHO/002/03/06 Annual Conference 1995 Photographs |
AdminHistory | The British Psychological Society held regular 'general' meetings from its earliest days when members and invited guests would read papers some of which were then published. They were called general meetings to differentiate them from Section (as the Society's specialist groups were called which were created 1919-1920). Lists of meeting titles and abstracts were published in the British Journal of Psychology and other Society publications.
By the end of its first year, December, 1902, the Society had held six meetings, four at University College, London, one at Cambridge and one at Oxford. Two or three papers were read with an interval for tea and afterwards a dinner was held. In 1910 the British Psychological Society joined the Aristotelian Society and Mind Association for a week-end of meetings. Two weekend meetings were held with the Royal Society of Medicine in 1914 - the second meeting was held at Durham University [see photographs PHO/001/03/08/05]).
In 1931 a general meeting was held outside London at the University of Reading and in 1933 a visit was made to Bethlem Royal Hospital. In 1936 a new venture of extended general meetings held was initiated, they were held from Friday until Monday at regional venues - the first was in Leeds 17-20 April. AGM was originally held in January and then December but by 1941 were part of the extended meeting which was called the Annual General Conference until 1995 and then the Annual Conference but it still included the AGM. [An annual London Conference was started in 1958].
1936 Leeds 1983 York 1937 Manchester 1984 Warwick 1938 St Andrews 1985 Swansea 1939 Reading 1986 Sheffield 1940 Birmingham (Louvain was cancelled) 1987 Sussex 1941 Nottingham 1988 Leeds 1942 Brighton 1989 St. Andrews 1943 Oxford 1990 Swansea 1944 Glasgow 1991 Bournemouth 1945 Exeter 1992 Scarborough 1946 Durham 1993 Blackpool 1947 Dartford Heath 1994 Brighton 1948 Birmingham 1995 Warwick 1949 Bristol 1996 Brighton 1950 Reading 1997 Edinburgh 1955 Durham 1998 Brighton 1951 Liverpool 1999 Belfast 1952 Oxford 2000 Winchester 1953 Nottingham 2001 Glasgow 1954 Nottingham 2002 Blackpool 1956 Manchester 2003 Bournemouth 1957 St. Andrews 2004 London 1958 Birmingham 2005 Manchester 1959 Cambridge 2006 Cardiff 1960 Hull 2007 York 1961 Liverpool 2008 Dublin 1962 Bristol 2009 Brighton 1963 Reading 2010 Stratford-upon-Avon 1964 Leicester 2011 Glasgow 1965 Aberdeen 2012 London 1966 Swansea 2013 Harrogate 1967 Belfast 2014 Birmingham 1968 Sheffield 2015 Liverpool 1969 Edinburgh 2016 Nottingham 1970 Southampton 2017 Brighton 1971 Exeter 2018 Nottingham 1972 Nottingham 1973 Liverpool 1974 Bangor 1975 Nottingham 1976 York 1977 Exeter 1978 York 1979 Nottingham 1980 Aberdeen 1981 Surrey (Univ. of) 1982 York
During the 1990 Annual Conference in Swansea the BBC recorded an edition of 'Any Questions' |