Professor Colin MacLeod is based at The University of Western Australia’s School of Psychological Science where he is Director of the Rutherford Memorial Centre for the Advancement of Research on Emotion (CARE).
After studying his undergraduate degree in psychology in Glasgow, Professor MacLeod undertook training in experimental cognitive psychology at Oxford University and in clinical psychology at London University. This was during a period of radical change within clinical psychology, marked by a shift from behavioural models to models that implicated distorted thinking processes in the development and maintenance of psychopathology. With a background that spanned these two hitherto separate fields of cognitive psychology and clinical psychology, Professor MacLeod was able to contribute to the establishment of what has become an influential tradition of research concerning the nature of the relationship between cognition and emotion.
Professor MacLeod is one of Australia’s most cited psychologists, and has received international recognition from his work illuminating the types of cognitive biases that underlie emotional vulnerability and resilience. Most recently illuminated from the Cognitive Bias Modification (CBM) techniques he has developed to directly alter these biases in ways that can therapeutically alleviate mental illnesses such as depression and anxiety. His research focuses on the patterns of selective attention, interpretation and memory that give rise to emotional resilience and emotional dysfunction.
Professor MacLeod believes it’s a privilege to belong to the School of Psychological Science’s group of committed scholars, who pursue excellence and innovation with great vigour, and work diligently and creatively to ensure that the University, its students and its community all benefit from the outstanding research carried out by members of the School.
Awards and Honors
2017 ARC Laureate Fellowship
2016 Fellow of the Association For Psychological Science
2015 Australian Psychological Society Distinguished Contributions to Psychological Science
2012 Thomson Reuter Citation Award
2002 Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia
Research work
Professor MacLeod was awarded one of 17 new Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowships, winning AUD$2.3 million to further his work examining the cognitive differences between productive and unproductive worry. The former involves people putting in place beneficial strategies to prevent foreseeable circumstances, while the latter tends to reduce useful actions.
This project will have major scientific impact, generating influential publications concerning the cognitive distinctions between productive and unproductive worry that will position Australia as a global leader in this field.
Professor MacLeod’s ARC Discovery work concerns the patterns of information processing that underpin the disposition to experience ongoing cognitive intrusions (flashbacks) following an acute traumatic experience. His Healthway work revolves around the development and evaluation of a cognitive bias modification package, designed to enhance resilience in WA schoolchildren.
Other work that is the focus of current grant applications includes the identification of the cognitive factors that contribute to resilient ageing (conducted in partnership with Brightwater), and a bid to establish an ARC Centre of Excellence in Human Resilience, in partnership with numerous agencies including State Departments of Education, Dementia Australia and the Australian Army.
Teaching
Professor MacLeod is currently teaching Honours and PhD programs in the areas of:
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