Professor Sue Sherman
School of Psychology
Professor of Psychology - School Co-Director of Education
Full contact details
School of Psychology
Interdisciplinary Centre of the Social Sciences (ICOSS)
219 Portobello
91探花
S1 4DP
- Profile
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I have a multidisciplinary background (computational linguistics, cognitive psychology and public health) and I joined the University of 91探花 as Professor of Psychology in August 2024.
- Qualifications
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BSc, MA, PhD, SFHEA
- Research interests
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My main area of research concerns public health, but I also conduct research from time to time on topics in cognitive psychology.
Public health
The focus of my public health research is on understanding the psychosocial barriers and facilitators to immunisation (HPV, COVID-19, varicella) and cancer screening (cervical and HPV self-sampling) uptake. I work closely with patient and charity stakeholders as well as representatives from public health bodies in the UK and New Zealand, and colleagues at other universities to deliver rigorous research with demonstrable impact on policy and practice.
Much of my research has a health equity focus and I am interested in the public, patient, and healthcare provider perspectives.
Cervical screening and HPV vaccination
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is a common group of viruses. Two low-risk HPV types can cause genital warts and several high-risk HPV types are responsible for causing cancers such as cervical, vulval, anal, penile, and head and neck cancers. There is an HPV vaccination that protects against some of these HPV types and in the UK, this is given to children aged 12-13 through a school-based programme. In addition, women and people with a cervix can go for cervical screening. In the UK and some other countries, HPV primary testing is the screening method used. This involves a sample of cells from the cervix being first tested for HPV infection and if the test is positive, they are further inspected using cytology for pre-cancerous cell changes, which if detected can be removed.
Since HPV primary screening has been introduced in the last few years, it has led to the development of self-sampling kits which have been introduced in some countries (e.g. Australia and New Zealand) and which have been piloted in the UK.
I currently lead an NIHR funded research project . The project has an and conference presentations and papers will be added here as the project progresses.
Cervical screening is a physically challenging procedure for many people. There is little research exploring the cervical screening experiences of physically Disabled people despite them being less likely to attend screening. This research is exploring what barriers exist in current practice, how these might be addressed and the extent to which alternatives to speculum-based sampling might be acceptable to people with a range of physical disabilities.
I work on this project along with my Research Associate Dr Emma Kemp as well as a team from The Eve Appeal, Queen Mary University London, and Keele University. In addition, we have a team of patient and public involvement (PPI) representatives who all have lived experience and advise us on the project development and delivery. PPI representation is central to the ethos and success of the funding scheme (Research for Patient Benefit) and the project, and we have a PPI co-investigator on the grant Samantha Renke who is an actress and journalist. You can watch .
Cognitive psychology
My PhD (2000-2004) focused on false memories created using the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) paradigm. In this paradigm, participants are presented with lists of words (e.g. bed, wake, night, dream) related to a non-presented critical lure word (e.g. sleep). On subsequent memory tasks, participants have robust false memories for the non-presented critical lure words. I remain fascinated by this area and in particular its application to real world stimuli such as adverts, music, and faces, as well as how mindfulness and mind wandering influence performance on the task.
- Publications
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Show: Featured publications All publications
Featured publications
Books
Journal articles
- . Vaccine, 42(10), 2621-2627.
- . Vaccine, 41(8), 1438-1446.
- . Health Expectations, 25(6), 2914-2923.
- . Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 17(6), 1612-1621.
- . Psychological Science, 31(8), 968-977.
- . Sexually Transmitted Infections, 92(6), 474-479.
- . European Journal of Public Health.
- . PLOS ONE, 13(4), e0195801-e0195801.
All publications
Books
Journal articles
- . Vaccine, 42(22).
- . Vaccine, 42(10), 2621-2627.
- . Psychology & Health, 39(4), 499-516.
- . Vaccine: X, 13, 100276-100276.
- . Vaccine, 41(8), 1438-1446.
- . Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 164, 111104-111104.
- . Health Expectations, 25(6), 2914-2923.
- . Sexually Transmitted Infections, 98(8), 599-607.
- . Journal of Psychosomatic Research, 152, 110679-110679.
- . Public Health, 202, 1-9.
- . Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 17(11), 4074-4082.
- . BMJ Open, 11(7), e049369-e049369.
- Recommendations for implementing HPV self-testing in Aotearoa. New Zealand Medical Journal, 134(1535), 11-16.
- . Human Vaccines & Immunotherapeutics, 17(6), 1612-1621.
- . Journal of Medical Screening, 28(3), 333-340.
- . British Journal of Psychology, 111(4), 603-629.
- . Psychological Science, 31(8), 968-977.
- . Journal of Medical Screening, 27(1), 40-47.
- . Acta Dermatovenerologica Alpina Pannonica et Adriatica, 28(3).
- . Psycho-Oncology, 27(6), 1559-1564.
- . Preventive Medicine, 101, 60-66.
- . International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics, 137(2), 138-144.
- . European Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology and Reproductive Biology, 201, 42-45.
- . Sexually Transmitted Infections, 92(6), 474-479.
- . Cytopathology, 27(4), 237-241.
- . Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 36(1), 76-80.
- . BMJ, 350(jun15 1), h2729-h2729.
- . Journal of Cancer Education, 30(4), 660-663.
- . Memory, 22(7), 852-860.
- . Cytopathology, 24(2), 77-80.
- . Memory, 21(2), 219-229.
- . BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, 119(1), 1-4.
- . British Journal of Psychology, 102(3), 559-568.
- . Applied Cognitive Psychology, 25(2), 336-340.
- . Neuropsychologia, 48(5), 1367-1375.
- . Behavior Research Methods, 39(3), 494-501.
- . Behavior Research Methods, 39(4), 884-891.
- . Behavior Research Methods, 38(4), 590-597.
- . Behavior Research Methods, 56(4), 3861-3872.
- . PLOS ONE, 17(12), e0279285-e0279285.
- . New Zealand Medical Journal, 135(1565), 83-94.
- . International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(19), 10050-10050.
- . Psychology of Popular Media Culture, 8(4), 402-409.
- . European Journal of Public Health.
- . PLOS ONE, 13(12), e0197648-e0197648.
- . PLOS ONE, 13(4), e0195801-e0195801.
- . Journal of Public Health.
- . Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition, 4(1), 1-7.
Chapters
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 439-477). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 525-563). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 565-594). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 353-397). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 21-77). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 127-187). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 1-20). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 595-629). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 309-351). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 479-523). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 263-307). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 79-125). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 189-210). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 399-437). Routledge
- , Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World (pp. 211-261). Routledge
Preprints
- Research group
- Grants
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Current grants:
2025-28, (Lead supervisor: 拢43k) matched funded PhD with Oracle Head and Neck Cancer UK. 鈥淭he impact of language on public understanding and patient experience of head and neck cancers鈥.
2022-26 (Principal Investigator: 拢357,133, NIHR204322) NIHR Research for Patient Benefit 鈥楥ervical screening for women with physical disabilities: barriers and solutions鈥 鈥 co-applicants: Kate Sanger from Jo鈥檚 Trust (replaced by Athena Lamnisos from Eve Appeal), Laura Marlow from KCL, Carolyn Chew-Graham, Andrew Finney, Charlotte Harper, Samantha Renke, Julius Sim, Katie Wright-Bevans, Keele University. The Research Associate is Dr Emma Kemp.
- Teaching activities
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I teach social psychology at Level 1 (PSY1001) and supervise Undergraduate research projects (PSY346) and extended essays (PSY331).
I have co-authored a BPS Core Textbook "Cognitive Psychology in a Changing World" published by Routledge and available .
- Professional activities and memberships
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I am currently a member of the UK HPV Coalition (2022-date) and in 2021 I set up and now lead the UK Human Papillomavirus (HPV) Special Interest Group.
Previously I was the external examiner for School of Psychology, Aston University (2021-2024), the Deputy Chair of BPS Research Board (2018-2021), Associate Editor for Journal of Cognitive Psychology (2017-2020) and Chair of the BPS Cognitive Section (2014-2017).
- PhD Opportunities
I am happy to receive applications for PhD study in my area of research.
We advertise PhD opportunities (Funded or Self-Funded) on
For further information, please see the department PhD Opportunities page.