Participation involves a microscope assessment of the eye by an optometrist, completing some questionnaires, and sensory testing at the neck and leg (90 minutes).
UQ researchers are seeking adults (18-35 years or 65 years or older) with normal or corrected-to-normal vision to participate in a study to understand cognitive mechanisms that subserve social connection.
UQ researchers are seeking adults (60-80 years) with normal or corrected-to-normal hearing to participate in a study to help us better aid those with speaking difficulties.
UQ researchers are seeking healthy, right-handed adults (18-35 years) to participate in a sleep study, to help us learn more about how we form new memories overnight.
The research aims to understand the cognitive mechanisms that subserve social connection, how these components change as we age into older adulthood, and their potential relationships with autism.
In this study we are interested in how mothers talk to different children within the same family when one sibling experiences a delay in developing language.
This study aims to understand whether and how social cognitive function changes across the adult lifespan and how these changes are related to wellbeing.