TaylorPJ CV Web.pages - Paul J. Taylor

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PAUL J. TAYLOR 16 January 2017 Appointments Director, Security Lancaster (cross-faculty centre for research and teaching) Professor of Psychology, Lancaster University, UK Professor in the Psychology of Human Interaction, Twente University, NL Address Phone Email

Department of Psychology, Lancaster University, UK, LA1 4YF +44 (0) 1524 594422 [email protected]

PREVIOUS APPOINTMENTS 2007-2012 2005-2007 2004-2005 1999-2000

Senior Lecturer then Reader in Forensic Psychology, Lancaster University, UK. Lecturer in Psychology, University of Liverpool, UK ESRC Post-doctoral Fellow, Psychology, The University of Liverpool, UK Centre for Investigative Psychology demonstrator, University of Liverpool, UK

EDUCATION 2004 1999 1998

PhD in Psychology, University of Liverpool, UK MSc in Investigative Psychology (distinction), University of Liverpool, UK BSc (Hons) in Psychology, First class, University of Essex, UK

Professional Training 2005 – 2004 2002 2001 2001

Certificate in Professional Studies (University of Liverpool) ESRC Post-doctoral conference (University of London) Postgraduate training programme (1999 – 2002, University of Liverpool) ESRC workshop on advanced research methods: Modelling latent constructs North West Consortium research / methodology training (various Universities)

HONOURS AND AWARDS Research Awards 2015 2013 2011 2010 2009

Best paper award (with Christos Charitonidis & Awais Rashid), IEEE/ACM ASONAM 2015, multidisciplinary track Best student research award (with Sophie van der Zee), European Association of Psychology and Law (EAPL) Best student poster (with Aarti Kotechi), International Investigative Interviewing Research Group (iIIRG) Best 2008 Published Paper Award (runner-up), International Association of Conflict Management Faculty Conference Best Poster from Research Assistant, Lancaster University

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Best Conference Poster Award (runner-up), European Association of Personality Psychology Best Applied Paper Award, International Association of Conflict Management Best Applied Paper Award, International Association of Conflict Management Earl Scheafer Best Research Paper Award, Society for Police and Criminal Psychology Winning Poster, Canadian Psychological Association

Professional Awards 2007

2005

Ministry of Defence Merit Award Awarded for excellence and dedication on a research project that made a critical contribution to professional work in defence Metropolitan Police Service Assistant Commissioner Commendation For “professionalism and dedication during a series of protracted and complex investigations.” These are rarely given to civilians

PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES 20082005-2013

British Psychological Society, Chartered Forensic Psychologist Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society (elected as a Fellow for work on analyzing interaction sequences)

Editorial Duties 20122009-2012 2006-2008 2005-2011

Editor, Legal and Criminological Psychology Associate Editor, Negotiation and Conflict Management Research Board Member, Negotiation and Conflict Management Research Board Member, Legal and Criminological Psychology

Ad-hoc Peer Reviewing Applied & Social Psych

Applied Cognitive Psychology, British Journal of Social Psychology, Employee Relations, International Journal of Conflict Management, Journal of Language and Social Psychology, Negotiation and Conflict Management Research, Negotiation Journal, Politics, Religion, & Ideology, Risk Analysis, Western Journal of Communication

Behavioural Science and Law

Canadian Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Criminal Justice and Behavior, Homicide Studies, International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, Journal of Forensic Sciences, Journal of Investigative Psychology and Offender Profiling, Journal of Police and Criminal Psychology, Journal of Sexual Violence, Legal and Criminological Psychology, Terrorism and Political Violence

General

Behavioral Research Methods, British Journal of Psychology, Current Biology,

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Science

IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, International Journal of Neural Systems, Journal of Royal Society: Interface, Multimedia Systems Journal, Plos One, Psychological Methods, Wiley.

Funders

ESRC, EPSRC, European Union, Leverhulme Trust, Mitacs, NWO, SSHRC.

FUNDING Research grants (Total Income: £10,846,532; Income as PI: £9,788,811; figures exclude VAT) 2016 (Total: £313,062) July 2016

Project grant “Using Digital Footprints for Selection and Assessment: Tranche 2.” (PI, 100%FEC, with Qinetiq)

July 2016

Project grant “Language Comparison: Using Linguistic Analysis to Detect Insider Risk” (PI, 100%FEC)

April 2016

Project grant “Breakfast at Therese’s three-minute tavern: Addition.” (PI, 100%FEC)

2015 (Total: £6,182,935) Nov 2015

Project grant “Using Digital Footprints for Selection & Assessment” (Co-I, 100%FEC)

Oct 2015

Project grant “Sensemaking and error recovery in protracted suspect interactions: Developing an ‘experiment led’ training framework” (PI, 100%FEC)

Oct 2015

ESRC Centre for Research and Evidence in Security Threats (PI, 80%FEC)

July 2015

EPSRC - EU project grant “DYPOSIT: Dynamic policies for shared cyber-physical infrastructures under attack” (Co-I, 80%FEC)

Jan 2015

Dutch ‘Tech4People’ grant “Developing a multi-modal simulation for training good interpersonal sensemaking” (PI)

2014 (Total: £597,779) Nov 2014

Project grant “Breakfast at Therese’s three-minute tavern: A round-robin test of sociometric confidence” (PI, 100%FEC)

Oct 2014

MoD/Dstl recognition as an approved supplier to R-Cloud (PI, no funding attached)

June 2014

EPSRC Impact Acceleration Award “One voice?: Digitizing narrative styles to help professionals recognise uncooperative dialogue” (PI)

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April 2014

Project grant “Cyber Defence: Automating the extraction and evaluation of interpersonal behaviours that identify legitimate insiders” (PI, 100%FEC)

Jan 2014

Project grant “LSM-IT: Quantifying the nature of day-to-day cooperation in secure environments” (PI, 100%FEC)

Jan 2014

Project grant “International consortium to produce a definitive evidence-based answer/policy as to the value of language-based deception detection methods” (PI, 100%FEC)

2013 (Total: £360,535) Dec 2013

Project grant “Behavioural correlates of trustworthiness intuitions” (Co-I, with Conchie, Lancaster)

Oct 2013

Project grant “Assessing cross-cultural differences in the effectiveness of strategies for educing information” (PI, with Giebels, Twente)

Aug 2013

Project grant “Sociometric measurement of consumer behaviour.” (PI)

June 2013

Industrial PhD studentship “Advancing a new understanding of communicative intent” (PI)

2012 (Total: £401,118) Oct 2012

Dstl PhD studentship “Developing a remote measure of trust for group effectiveness” (Co-I; Conchie, Liverpool)

Oct 2012

Dstl PhD studentship “Weak signals as predictors and influencers of collective action in online social media.” (Co-I; Rashid, Lancaster)

Mar 2012

EPSRC/GCHQ Academic Centre of Excellence in Cyber Security Research recognition

2012-2014

Project grant “Resilience, robustness and recovery of high-risk teams” (Co-PI; with Conchie, Liverpool)

2012-2013

Project grant “Integrating Speech Recognition into Text Analysis” (PI)

2011 (Total: £530,728) 2011-2013

Two-year research fellowship “Language cues to cooperation” (PI)

2011-2015

Higher Education Innovation Fund grant for a Faculty Research and Enterprise Centre (for Security-Lancaster)

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2010 (Total: £1,023,460) 2010-2011

Project grant “Developing DSTL a more efficient and accurate method of assessing adversary personality in cyberspace” (PI; with Wall, Lancaster)

2010-2012

Project grant “Develop and evaluate methods for detecting threats to organisation security” (Co-I; with Dando and Ormerod, psychology, Lancaster)

Jan-Apr 2010

Faculty grant “Development of software for proximity coefficient analysis” (Co-I; with Menacere, Lancaster)

2010-2013

Project grant “Development of interview methods in native and non-native populations” (PI; with Hazlett, Woodard-Cody; Morgan, Yale; Rabinowitz, Texas A&M; Dando and Ormerod, Lancaster)

2009 (Total: £776,046) 2009-2012

Project grant “Development of ‘TRACE’” (PI; with Rayson, computing, Lancaster)

2009-2010

Project grant “Techniques for eliciting full and genuine accounts” (PI)

2009-2011

Higher Education Innovation Fund grant for an Investigative Expertise Unit (PI; with Ormerod and Dando, psychology, Lancaster)

2009-2010

Project grant “Cultural differences in interpersonal nonverbal behaviour: Trial of a new methodology” (PI; with Dixon, psychology, Lancaster)

2009-2010

Project grant “Developing our understanding of the language of extremism” (PI; with Hoskins, sociology, Warwick; O’Loughlin, international relations, Royal Holloway; Rayson, computing, Lancaster)

2008 (Total: £278,254) 2008-2009

Project grant “Linguistic indicators follow-up: Training development” (PI)

2007-2010

Industrial PhD Studentship awarded to Helen Wall

2007-2009

Project grant “Linguistic indicators of cooperation across cultures” (PI)

2007 and prior (Total: £171,568) 2006-2008

PhD studentship awarded to Karen Jacques (funds not included in above Totals)

2006-2008

Psychologist on secondment, Ministry of Defence, UK

2006-2007

University of Liverpool Research Development Fund (Co-I; Conchie, Liverpool)

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2006

British Council - NWO Partnership Programme in Science (with Prof. Ellen Giebels, Twente University, The Netherlands)

2004-2005

ESRC Post-doctoral fellowship

2000-2003

PhD scholarship

Travel grants (Total: £6,830) 2008

Foundation for Canadian Studies: University Partnership Program (with Goodwill, Psychology, Birmingham)

2006-2010

International Association of Conflict Management travel grant

2005

European Office of Aerospace Research and Development travel grant

2002

Faculty of Science travel grant, Liverpool

2002

British Psychological Society symposia grant

1997

ERASMUS grant for research exchange

1997

British Rotary Society grant for student travel

CPD courses (income to the University, Total: £62,075) 2014

Academic-practitioner networking “State of the art and its policy implications” ($14,000)

2011

Academic-practitioner networking grant “Winning people over: The state of the art”

2011

One day CPD course on forensic linguistics

2009

Three day CPD course on forensic linguistics

PUBLICATIONS Peer-reviewed Publications 1.

Taylor, P. J., Holbrook, D., & Joinson, A. (in press). A same kind of different: Affordances, terrorism and the Internet. Criminology and Public Policy.

2.

Giebels, E., Oostinga, M. S. D., Taylor, P. J., & Curtis, J. (in press) The cultural dimension of uncertainty avoidance impacts police-civilian interaction. Law and Human Behavior. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000227

3.

Charitonidis, C., Rashid, A., & Taylor, P. J. (in press). Predicting collective action from micro-blog data. Lecture Notes in Social Networks.

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4.

Carrick, T., Rashid, A., & Taylor, P. J. (2016). Mimicry in online conversations: An exploratory study of linguistic analysis techniques. Proceedings of 2016 IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Networks Analysis and Mining.

5.

Taylor, P. J., & Donohue, W. A. (in press). Lessons from the extreme: What business negotiators can learn from hostage negotiations. The Revised Negotiators Handbook.

6.

Miri, H., Kolkmeier, J., Poppe, R., Taylor, P. J., & Heylen, D. (2016). project SENSE – Multimodal Simulation with Full-Body Real-Time Verbal and Nonverbal Interactions. Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Intelligent Technologies for Interactive Entertainments. Utrecht, Netherlands.

7.

Emeno, K., Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (2016). Geographic profiling survey: A preliminary examination of geographic profilers’ views and experiences. International Journal of Police Science and Management, 18, 3-12.

8.

Wall, H. J., Taylor, P. J., & Campbell, C. (2016). Getting the balance right? A mismatch in interaction demands between target and judge impacts on judgement accuracy for some traits but not others. Personality and Individual Differences, 88, 66-72.

9.

Charitonidis, C., Rashid, A., & Taylor, P. J. (2015). Weak signals as predictors of real-world phenomena in social media. Proceedings of the IEEE/ACM International Conference on Advances in Social Network Analysis (ASONAM-2015), 15, 864-871. New York: ACM. doi: 10.1145/2808797.2809332

10.

Poppe, R., Van der Zee, S., Taylor, P. J., Anderson, R., & Veltkamp, R. C. (2015). Mining bodily cues to deception. Proceedings of the 48th Hawai’i International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-48).

11.

Van der Zee, S., Poppe, R., Taylor, P. J., & Anderson, R. (2015). To freeze or not to freeze: A motion-capture approach to detecting deceit. Proceedings of the 48th Hawai’i International Conference on System Sciences (HICSS-48).

12.

Vrij, A., Taylor, P. J., Picornell, I. (2015). Verbal lie detection. In Oxburgh, G., Grant, T., Myklebust, T., & Milne, B. (Eds.), Forensic communication: Integrated approaches from psychology, linguistics and law enforcement. Wiley.

13.

Conchie, S. M., Woodcock, H. E., & Taylor, P. J. (2015). Trust-based approaches to safety and production. In S. Clarke (Ed.), Handbook of the psychology of occupational safety and workplace health. Wiley-Blackwell.

14.

Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Porter, L. (2014). Investigative psychology. In B. L. Cutler, & P. A. Zapf (Eds.), APA handbook of forensic psychology (vol 2., pp. xxx-xxx). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.

15.

Taylor, P. J., Larner, S., Conchie, S. M., & Van der Zee, S. (2014). Cross-cultural deception detection. In P. A. Granhag, A. Vrij, & B. Verschuere (Eds.), Deception detection: Current challenges and cognitive approaches (pp. 175-202). Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell.

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16.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., Snook, B., Conchie, S. M., & Bennell, C. (2014). Language style matching and confessions in police interrogations. Law and Human Behavior, 38, 357-366. doi:10.1037/lhb0000077

17.

Poppe, R., van der Zee, S., Heylen, D., & Taylor, P. J. (2014). AMAB: Automated measurement and analysis of body motion. Behavior Research Methods, 46, 625-633. doi: 10.3758-13428-013-0398-y

18.

Taylor, P. J. (2014). The role of language in conflict and conflict resolution. In T. Holtgraves (Ed.), Handbook of Language and Social Psychology (pp. 459-470). New York: Oxford University Press.

19.

Wall. H. J., Taylor, P. J., Conchie, S. M., Dixon, J., & Ellis, D. (2013). Rich contexts do not always enrich the accuracy of personality judgments. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 1190-1195.

20.

Taylor, P. J., Dando, C., Ormerod, T., Ball, L., Jenkins, M., Sandham, A., & Menacere, T. (2013). Detecting insider threats to organizations through language change. Law and Human Behavior, 37, 267-275.

21.

Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (2013). Myths and realities of female-perpetrated terrorism. Law and Human Behavior, 37, 35-44.

22.

Wells, S., Taylor, P. J., & Giebels, E. (2013). Crisis negotiations. M. Olekalns, & W. Adair (Eds.), Handbook of research in negotiation (pp. 473-498). London: Edward Edgar Publishing.

23.

Prentice, S., Rayson, P., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). The language of Islamic extremism: Towards an automated identification of ideas, beliefs, motivations and justifications. International Journal of Corpus Linguistics, 17, 259-286.

24.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). Expanding the horizons of terrorism and political violence research. Negotiation and Conflict Management Research, 5, 235-238.

25.

Prentice, S., Taylor, P. J., Rayson, P., & Giebels, E. (2012). Differentiating act from ideology: Evidence from messages for and against violent extremism. Negotiation and Conflict Management Research, 5, 289-306.

26.

Snook, B., Luther, K., House, J. C., Bennell, C., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). The violent crime linkage analysis system: A test of its inter-rater reliability. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 39, 607-619.

27.

Bennell, C., Snook, B., MacDonald, S., House, J. C., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). Computerized crime linkage systems: A critical review and research agenda. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 39, 620-634.

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28.

Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. (2012). Promoting safety voice with safetyspecific transformational leadership: The mediating role of two dimensions of trust. Journal of Occupational Health Psychology, 17, 105-115.

29.

Taylor, P. J., Donald, I., Jacques, K., & Conchie, S. (2012). Jaccard’s heel: Are radex models of criminal behaviour falsifiable when derived using Jaccard coefficient? Legal and Criminological Psychology, 17, 41-58.

30.

Vartanian, O., Stewart, K., Mandel, D. R., Pavlovic, N., McLellan, L., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). Personality assessment and behavioral prediction at first impression. Personality and Individual Differences, 52, 250-254.

31.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2012). Tuning in to the right wavelength: The importance of culture for effective crisis negotiation. In M. St. Yves, & P. Collins (Eds.), The psychology of crisis intervention (pp. 277-298). Montreal, Canada: Editions Yvon Blais. Also in French as: Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2010). Être sur la même longueur d'onde : la communication interculturelle en contexte de négociation de crise. In M. St-Yves, & P. Collins (Eds.), Psychologie de l'intervention policière en situation de crise. Montreal, Canada: Editions Yvon Blais.

32.

Levine, M., Taylor, P. J., & Best, R. (2011). Third-parties, violence and conflict resolution: The role of group size and collective action in the micro-regulation of violence. Psychological Science, 22, 406-412.

33.

Prentice, S., Taylor, P. J., Rayson, P., Hoskins, A., & O’Loughlin, B. (2011). Analyzing the semantic content and persuasive composition of extremist media: A case study of texts produced during the Gaza conflict. Information Systems Frontiers, 13, 61-73.

34.

Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., & Charlton, A. (2011). Trust and distrust in safety leadership: Mirror reflections? Safety Science, 49, 1208-1214.

35.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2011). Interaction patterns of social influence in crisis negotiation. In R, Rogan & F. Lanceley (Eds.), Contemporary theory, research, and practice of crisis and hostage negotiation (pp. 59-76). Cresskill, NJ: Hampton.

36.

Beune, K., Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2010). Patterns of interaction in police interviews: The role of cultural dependency. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 37, 904-925.

37.

Bennell, C., Bloomfield, S., Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Barnes, C. (2010). Linkage analysis in cases of serial burglary: comparing the performance of university students, police professionals, and a logistic regression model. Psychology, Crime and Law, 16, 507-524.

38.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2009). Interaction patterns in crisis negotiations: Persuasive arguments and cultural differences. Journal of Applied Psychology, 94, 5-19.

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39.

Bennell, C., Emeno, K., Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Goodwill, A. M. (2009). The precision, accuracy and efficiency of geographic profiling predictions: A simple heuristic versus mathematical algorithms. Crime Mapping: A Journal of Research and Practice, 1, 65-84.

40.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., Gendreau, P., & Bennell, C. (2009). On the need for scientific experimentation in the criminal profiling field: A reply to Dern et al. (2009). Criminal Justice and Behavior, 36, 1091-1094.

41.

Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (2009). Female terrorism: A review. Terrorism and Political Violence, 21, 499-515.

42.

Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., & Snook, B. (2009). The bounds of cognitive heuristic performance on the geographic profiling task. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 23, 410-430.

43.

Taylor, P. J., Jacques, K., Giebels, E., Levine, M., Best, R., Winter, J., & Rossi, G. (2008). Analysing forensic processes: Taking time into account. Issues in Forensic Psychology, 8, 45-57.

44.

Snook, B., Cullen, R. M., Bennell C., & Taylor, P. J., Gendreau, P. (2008). The criminal profiling illusion: What's behind the smoke and mirrors? Criminal Justice and Behavior, 35, 1257-1276. prompted the following response: Dern, H., Dern, C., Horn, A., & Horn, U. (2009). The fire behind the smoke: A reply to Snook and colleagues. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 36, 1085-1090.

45.

Taylor, P. J., & Thomas, S. (2008). Linguistic style matching and negotiation outcome. Negotiation and Conflict Management Research, 1, 263-281.

46.

Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (2008). Male and female suicide bombers: Different sexes, different reasons? Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, 31, 304-326.

47.

Ormerod, T., Barrett, E., & Taylor, P. J. (2008). Investigative sensemaking in criminal contexts. In J. M. Schraagen, L. G. Militello, T. Ormerod, & R. Lipshitz (Eds.), Naturalistic decision making and macrocognition (pp. 81-102). Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

48.

Emeno, K., Bennell, C., Taylor, P.J., & Snook, B. (2008). Clinical versus actuarial geographic profiling approaches: A meta-analysis. In G. Bourgon, K. Hanson, J. Pozzulo, K. E. Morton-Bourgon, & C. L. Tanasichuk (Eds.), The proceedings of the 2007 North American correctional and criminal justice psychology conference (pp. 77-80). Ottawa, ON: Public Safety Canada.

49.

Snook, B., Haines, A., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (2007). Criminal profiling use and belief: A study of Canadian police officer opinion. Canadian Journal of Police and Security Services, 5, 169-179.

50.

Bennell, C., Taylor, P. J., & Snook, B. (2007). Clinical versus actuarial geographic profiling approaches: A review of the research. Police Practice and Research, 8, 335-345.

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51.

Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (2007). Role effects in negotiation: The one-down phenomenon. Negotiation Journal, 23, 307-331.

52.

Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. J. (2007). Testing the relationship between local cue-response patterns and global dimensions of communication behaviour. British Journal of Social Psychology, 46, 273-298.

53.

Bennell, C., Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., Covey, S., & Keyton, J. (2007). It’s no riddle, choose the middle: The effect of number of crimes and topographical detail on police officer predictions of serial burglars’ home locations. Criminal Justice and Behavior, 34, 119-132.

54.

Donald, I. J., & Taylor, P. J. (2007). Investigative psychology. In D. Clark (Ed.), Encyclopedia of law and society: American and global perspectives. New York: Sage.

55.

Taylor, P. J. (2006). Proximity coefficients as a measure of interrelationships in sequences of behavior. Behavioral Research Methods, 38, 42-50.

56.

Conchie, S. M., Donald, I., & Taylor, P. J. (2006). Trust: Missing piece(s) in the safety puzzle. Risk Analysis, 26, 1097-1104.

57.

Bennell, C., Jones, N., Taylor, P. J., & Snook, B. (2006). Validities and abilities in criminal profiling: A critique of the studies conducted by Richard Kocsis and his colleagues. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 50, 344-360.

58.

Taylor, P. J., & Donohue, W. A. (2006). Hostage negotiation opens up. In A. Schneider & C. Honeymoon (Eds.), The negotiator’s fieldbook (pp. 667-674). New York: American Bar Association Press.

59.

Salfati, C. G., & Taylor, P. J. (2006). Differentiating sexual violence: A comparison of sexual homicide and rape. Psychology, Crime and Law, 12, 107-125. Appeared at position 5 in the PCL Top 10 Downloaded Articles in 2006.

60.

Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., Johnson, S., Cooper, C., & Cartwright, S. (2005). Work environments, stress and productivity: An examination using ASSET. International Journal of Stress Management, 2, 409-423. reprinted as: Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., Johnson, S., Cooper, C., & Cartwright, S. (2005). Work environments, stress and productivity: An examination using ASSET. In C. L. Cooper & I. T. Robertson (Eds.), Management and happiness. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.

61.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (2005). Shortcuts to geographic profiling success: A reply to Rossmo. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 19, 655-661.

62.

Johnson, S., Cooper, C., Cartwright, S., Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., & Cook, C. (2005). The experience of work-related stress across occupations. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 20, 178-187.

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reprinted as: Johnson, S., Cooper, C., Cartwright, S., Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., & Cook, C. (2009). The experience of work-related stress across occupations. In A.M. Rossi, J.C. Quick, & P. L. Perrewe (Eds.), Stress and quality of life (pp. 67-77). Charlotte, NC: Information Age Publishing. reprinted as: Johnson, S., Cooper, C., Cartwright, S., Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., & Cook, C. (2009). The experience of work-related stress across occupations. In A.M. Rossi, J.C. Quick, & P. L. Perrewe (Eds.), Stress E qualidade de vida no trabalho. Sao Paulo: Editora Atlas. 63.

Snook, B., Zito, M., Bennell, C., & Taylor, P. J. (2005). On the complexity and accuracy of geographic profiling strategies. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 21, 1-26.

64.

Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. J. (2004). The structure of communication behavior in simulated and actual crisis negotiations. Human Communication Research, 30, 443-478.

65.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (2004). Geographical profiling: The fast, frugal, and accurate way. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 18, 105-121. prompted two responses: i) Rossmo, K. (2005). Geographic Heuristics or Shortcuts to Failure?: Response to Snook et al. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 19, 651-654.; and ii) Canter, D. (2005). Confusing Operational Predicaments and Cognitive Explorations: Comments on Rossmo and Snook et al. Applied Cognitive Psychology, 19, 663-668. reprinted as Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (2011). Geographical profiling: The fast, frugal, and accurate way. In G. Gigerenzer, R. Hertwig, & T. Pachur (Eds.), Homo heuristicus: Complex rules in a simple world. Milton Keynes, UK: Open University Press.

66.

Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. J. (2003). Foundations and evidence for an interaction based approach to conflict. International Journal of Conflict Management, 14, 213-232.

67.

Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (2003). Testing the role effect in terrorist negotiations. International Negotiation, 8, 527-547. reprinted as Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (2006). Testing the role effect in terrorist negotiations. In W. Zartman (Ed.), Negotiating with terrorists (pp. 83-102). Leiden, The Netherlands: Koninklijke Brill.

68.

Taylor, P. J. (2002). A cylindrical model of communication behavior in crisis negotiations. Human Communication Research, 28, 7-48.

69.

Taylor, P. J. (2002). A partial order scalogram analysis of communication behavior in crisis negotiation with the prediction of outcome. International Journal of Conflict Management, 13, 4-37.

70.

Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., & Snook, B. (2002). Problems of classification in investigative psychology. In K. Jajuga, A. Sokolowski, & H.-H., Bock (Eds.), Classification, clustering,

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and data analysis: Recent advances and applications (pp. 479-487). Vertlag, Heidelberg: Springer. identified as a noteworthy paper in: Steinley, D. (2006). A review of three classification society meetings: 2001-2002. Journal of Classification, 23, 169-172. Non-Peer Reviewed Publications 71.

Taylor, P. J., (June, 2013). How technology is revolutionizing our understanding of human cooperation (Inaugural lecture). Twente University Press.

72.

Taylor, P. J. (2012). Editorial. Legal and Criminological Psychology, 17, 195.

73.

Snook, B., Bennell, C., Taylor, P. J., House, J. C., MacDonald, S., & Luther, K. (April, 2012). Questioning the assumptions: A critique of the Violent Crime Linkage Analysis System (ViCLAS). Blueline, 14-16.

74.

Snook, B., Gendreau, P., Bennell, C., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2008). Criminal profiling: Granfalloons and gobbledygook. Skeptic, 14, 36-41.

75.

Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (October, 2005). Geographic profiling on trial: Ten problems with the Rossmo and Filer defence. Blueline, 34-36. prompted the following response: Rossmo, D. K, Filer, S. & Sesely, C. (November, 2005). Geographic profiling debate - Round four: The big problem with Bennell, Snook, & Taylor’s research. Blueline, 28-29.

76.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (April, 2005). Man versus machine: The case of geographic profiling. Blueline, 56. prompted the following response: Rossmo, D. K., & Filer, S. (August, 2005). Analysis versus guesswork: The case for professional geographic profiling. Blueline, 24-26.

77.

Corey, S., Bennell, C., Taylor, P. J., & Snook, B. (2005). The effect of task complexity on predictive accuracy in a geographic profiling task. Crime Scene, 12, 14-16.

78.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (2003). Brunswik’s influence on geographic profiling research. In C. Harries (Ed.), The Brunswik society newsletter (pp. 28-29). London: Brunswik Society.

CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS (inc. INVITED) AND POSTERS 1.

Taylor, P. J. (2016). The good stranger. Keynote presentation at the Fifth BPS Military Psychology Conference. Basingstoke, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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2.

Watson, S. J., Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., & Poppe, R. W. (2016). Utilising motion capture technology to identify trusted testimony in military encounters. Poster to be given at the Fifth BPS Military Psychology Conference. Basingstoke, UK.

3.

Charitonidis, C., Rashid, A., & Taylor, P. J. (2016). Predicting collective action from microblog data. Presentation submitted to the 2016 RTSNAM conference.

4.

Prentice, S., Taylor, P. J., & Rayson, P. (June, 2016). Poles apart? Exploring the extent of similarity between extreme and non-extreme message content. Presentation at the 2016 Rethinking Cybercrime conference. Preston, UK.

5.

Oostinga, M. S. D., Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2016). Error orientation as a determinant of communication error repair in crisis negotiations. Presentation to be given at the European Association of Psychology and Law. Toulouse, France.

6.

Watson, S. J., Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., & Poppe, R. (November, 2015). Identifying nonverbal indicators of trust judgments via the Xsens system. Presentation at the Xsens Annual User Meeting: Human Motion Measurement. Coventry, UK.

7.

Watson, S., Conchie, S. M., & Taylor, P. J. (February, 2016). Behavioural monitoring to feedback of trustworthiness intuitions (BM2fTI). Invited poster presentation at Defence Human Capability Science & Technology Centre Conference.

8.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2015). Future risks and technology. Invited presentation at the Third Pembroke Workshop in Security. Pembroke College, Oxford.

9.

Van Der Zee, S., Poppe, R., Taylor, P. J., & Anderson, R. (August, 2015). Body of lies: Unobtrusively measuring deceptive behaviour in real time. Presentation at Decepticon 2015. Cambridge, UK.

10.

Watson, S., Conchie, S. M., & Taylor, P. J. (August, 2015). Utilising motion capture technology to identify non-verbal indicators of trust judgements. Presentation at Decepticon 2015. Cambridge, UK.

11.

Curtis, J., Taylor P. J., Oostinga, M., & Giebels, E. (July, 2015). Sensmaking and concessions in crisis negotiation. Presentation at the 2015 IACM conference. Clearwater, USA.

12.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., & McCulloch, K. (July, 2015). The cooperation link: Power and context moderates verbal mimicry. Presentation at the 2015 IACM conference. Clearwater, USA.

13.

Oostinga, M. S., Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2015). The effect of error making and error recovery in conflict interactions. Presentation at the 2015 IACM conference. Clearwater, USA.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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14.

Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., McClelland, C., & Ellis, D. A. (July, 2015). Promoting errors in groups: What disrupts performance and when? Presentation at the 2015 IACM conference. Clearwater, USA.

15.

Taylor, P. J., & Banks, F. (July, 2015). Keeping potential enemies closer: Sensemaking in everyday worklife. Presentation at the 2015 IACM conference. Clearwater, USA.

16.

Conchie, S. M., Watson, S., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2015). Behavioral correlates of trustworthiness intuitions in military interviews. Presentation at the Annual Association of Psychological Science Conference, New York.

17.

Taylor, P. J. (June, 2015). Detecting insider threat through language indicators. Presentation at the Annual Association of Psychological Science Conference, New York.

18.

Taylor, P. J. (November, 2014). Email physics: What we can infer about hierarchies, groupies and deceit from everyday emails? Presentation at the Forensic Linguistics Research Group meeting, Lancaster, UK.

19.

McClelland, C., Conchie, S. M., Ellis, D., & Taylor, P. J. (2014). When do teams fail? Factors inhibiting team performance. Presentation give at the Institute of Work Psychology International Conference. Sheffield, UK.

20.

Woodhams, J., Cooke, C., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2013). A sequential analysis of the interpersonal dynamics of multiple perpetrator rape. Presentation given at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

21.

Taylor, P. J., Dando, C., Ormerod, T. C., Ball, L. J., Jenkins, M. C., Sandham, A., & Menacere, T. (September, 2013). Detecting insider threats through language change. Presentation given at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

22.

Van der Zee, S., Taylor, P. J., & Noordzij, M. (September, 2013). Nonverbal mimicry as a cue to deception in first- and second-language interviews. Presentation given at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

23.

Richardson, B., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2013). The effect of linguistic priming on cues to deception. Presentation given at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

24.

Nicholson, S., Conchie, S. M., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2013). Developing a language measure of trust to predict online group action. Presentation given at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

25.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2013). Analysing forensic processes: Taking time into account. Keynote presentation at the European Association of Psychology and Law conference, Coventry, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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26.

Richardson, B., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2013). Encouraging cooperation: Language matching as a strategic social tool. Presentation given at the British Psychological Society’s Social Psychology division conference, Exeter, UK.

27.

Nicholson, S., Richardson, B., Walton, C., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2013). Strategic linguistic style matching in negotiations. Presentation given at the annual PsyPAG conference, Lancaster, UK.

28.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., Snook, B., & Bennell, C. (June, 2013). Interpersonal behaviour and interviewee cooperation. Presentation given at SARMAC X, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

29.

Dando, C., Taylor, P. J., & Ormerod, T. (March, 2013). Detecting deception: Can computers interview to detect persons of interest following an insider attack? Poster given at the 2013 American Psychology-Law Society conference, Portland, Oregon.

30.

Taylor, P. J. (November, 2012). Risk management of terrorism: Behavior as a data point. Invited presentation at the Symposium on Risk management and terrorist threats. Twente University, The Netherlands.

31.

Taylor, P. J., Beune, K., & Giebels, E. (November, 2012). Misunderstandings as a challenge in cross-cultural police-civilian interactions. Presentation given at the Sixty-eighth annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology. Chicago.

32.

Van der Zee, S., Rotman, L., Taylor, P. J., Giebels, E., Miles, R., & Dixon, J. (September, 2012). Mimicry as a cue to deception in cross-cultural interactions. Presentation given at the Sixty-eighth annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology. Chicago.

33.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., Snook, B., & Bennell, C. (September, 2012). Verbal dynamics of police interactions. Presentation given at the Sixty-eighth annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology. Chicago.

34.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2012). Cyber security: The human dimensions. Invited presentation given at the Lancaster Cyber Security Challenge. Lancaster, UK.

35.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2012). Crisis negotiation. Invited presentation at DRRC, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University.

36.

Taylor, P. J., Donald, I. J., & Conchie, S. M. (July, 2012). The triple-interact as a building block of negotiation. Presentation to be given at the Twenty-fifth International Association of Conflict Management conference. Cape Town, South Africa.

37.

MacInnes, K., Taylor, P. J., & Rayson, P. (April, 2012). The counter-persuasive methods of anti-extremist messages on the Internet. Poster presented at the 2012 European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Cyprus.

38.

Hamlin, I., & Taylor, P. J., Cross, L., Hobson, S., Torrance, V. (April 2012). Individual differences in deception phenomenology: Factor structure and relationships with personality

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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and cues to deception. Poster presented at the 2012 European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Cyprus. 39.

Van der Zee, S., Taylor, P. J., Dando, C., & Dixon, J. (April, 2012). Non-verbal mimicry increases when deceiving (particularly when responding to reverse-order questioning). Paper presented at the 2012 European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Cyprus.

40.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., Snook, B., Conchie, S. M., & Bennell, C. (April, 2012). Linguistic style matching and confessions in police interrogations. Paper presented at the 2012 European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Cyprus.

41.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., & Gillespie, A. (January, 2012). Power and context moderate the positive effects of verbal mimicry. Poster presented at the Thirteenth annual Society of Personality and Social Psychology meeting. San Diego.

42.

Van der Zee, S., Taylor, P. J., & Dando, C., Miles, R., & Dixon, J. (January, 2012). NonVerbal mimicry reduces when deceiving (particularly when responding to reverse-order questioning). Poster presented at the Thirteenth annual Society of Personality and Social Psychology meeting. San Diego.

43.

Taylor, P. J. (October 2011). The good stranger: Sensemaking and cooperation. Invited presentation at the Department of Psychology Symposium, Portsmouth University, UK.

44.

Levine, M., & Taylor, P. J. (July 2011). The information regulation of aggression and violence in public places: How groups police themselves. Presentation at the Sixteenth general meeting of the European Association of Social Psychology. Stockholm: Sweden.

45.

Kotecha, A., Dando, C., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2011). Language as a source of cognitive load. Are verbal cues to deception more pronounced in a non-native language? Poster presented at the 2011 iIIRG annual conference. Abertay, Scotland.

46.

Van der Zee, S., Taylor, P., Dando, C., Miles, R., Dixon, J., & Menacere, T. (June, 2011). Deception, mimicry, and cognitive load: The influence of cognitive load on behavioural coordination. Poster presented at the 2011 iIIRG annual conference. Abertay, Scotland.

47.

Taylor, P. J., Morgan, C., Hazlett, G., Hamlin, I., & Richardson, B. (June, 2011). Beyond error: Using individual differences to enhance lie detection. Presentation given at the Twentieth British Psychological Society Annual Division of Forensic Psychology conference. Portsmouth, UK.

48.

Taylor, P. J., Tomblin, S., Conchie, S. M., & Menacere, T. (March, 2011). Linguistic indicators of deception in some cultures are indicators of truth in others. Presentation given at the Fourth International Congress on Psychology and Law. Miami, Florida.

49.

Taylor, P. J. (January, 2011). Understanding the medium and the networks. Invited presentation at Wilton Park, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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50.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2010). Cross cultural challenges for research outcomes. Invited presentation at the First meeting of the International Consortium of the Applied Behavioral Sciences. Orlando, Florida.

51.

Taylor, P. J., Miles, R., & Dixon, J. (June, 2010). Changes in nonverbal mimicry predict deception in cross-cultural interviews. Presentation given at the Twentieth European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Gothenberg, Sweeden.

52.

MacInnes, K., Taylor, P. J., & Rayson, P. (June, 2010). The counter-persuasive methods of anti-extremist messages on the Internet. Poster presented at the Twentieth European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Gothenberg, Sweeden.

53.

Richardson, B., Taylor, P. J., & Gillespie, A. (June, 2010). Is linguistic style matching an effective interpersonal strategy?: Power dynamics may explain contradictory findings. Poster presented at the Twentieth European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Gothenberg, Sweeden.

54.

Prentice, S., Rayson, P., Taylor, P. J., Hoskins, A., & O’Loughlin, B. (June, 2010). What Sort of Ideology Characterises Islamic Terrorist Media?: Towards an automated identification of ideas, beliefs, motivations and justifications. Poster presented at the Twentieth European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Gothenberg, Sweeden.

55.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (June, 2010). Simple geographic profiling heuristics: A review of our research. Paper presented at the Twentieth European Association of Psychology and Law conference. Gothenberg, Sweeden.

56.

Taylor, P. J., Thomas, S., & Conchie, S. M. (January, 2010). Linguistic style matching predicts the outcome of crisis negotiations. Presentation given at the eleventh annual Society for Personality and Social Psychology conference. Las Vegas, CA.

57.

Prentice, S., Taylor, P. J., Rayson, P., Hoskins, A., & O’Loughlin, B. (December, 2009). Analysing the semantic content and persuasive composition of extremist media: A case study of texts produced during the Gaza conflict. Presentation given at the University Centre for Computer Corpus Research on Language seminar series. Lancaster, UK.

58.

Miles, R., Taylor, P. J., & Dixon, J. (January, 2010). The differential effect of interviewinterviewee culture on nonverbal correlates of deception. Poster given at the eleventh annual Society for Personality and Social Psychology conference. Las Vegas, CA.

59.

Miles, R., Taylor, P. J., & Dixon, J. (January, 2010). The differential effect of interviewinterviewee culture on nonverbal correlates of deception. Poster given at the Faculty of Science and Technology Christmas conference. Lancaster, UK. [Winner of the best poster award]

60.

Winter, J, Rossi, G., Alen, C., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2009). Pathways of pedosexual offenders: Applying proximity analysis to offender decision making. Presentation given at the Nineteenth Conference of the European Association of Psychology and Law. Sorrento, Italy.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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61.

Van den Heuvel, C., Alison, L., Crego, J., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2009). Decisions under threat: A phase model of police decision making in counter-terrorism. Presentation given at the Nineteenth Conference of the European Association of Psychology and Law. Sorrento, Italy.

62.

Wall, H., Taylor, P. J., Williams, K., & Conchie, S. M. (July, 2009). The good judge: Does emotional intelligence moderate the accuracy of zero-acquaintance judgements? Poster presented at the 2009 Conference of the International Society for the Study of Individual Differences. Evanston, Illinois.

63.

Taylor, P. J., Giebels, E., Gnisci, A., Beune, K., Tomblin, S. (July, 2009). Cultural differences in investigative interactions (four talks). Thematic session presented at the International Association of Forensic Linguistics. Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

64.

Tomblin, S., Taylor, P. J., Vrij, A., Leal, S., Mann, S., & Menacere, T. (July, 2009). Formulaic language occurs more often in deceptive statements. Poster presented at the International Association of Forensic Linguistics. Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

65.

Taylor, P. J., & Conchie, S. M. (June 2009). How do Chameleons bake bigger pies?: Dissecting the layers of behavioral alignment in negotiation. Presentation given at the 2009 conference of the International Association of Conflict Management. Kyoto, Japan.

66.

Taylor, P. J., Tomblin, S., & Menacere, T. (May 2009). Linguistic indicators of deception in some cultures are indicators of truth in others. Poster presented at the Twenty-first Convention of the Association for Psychological Science. San Francisco, California.

67.

Wall. H. J., & Taylor, P. J. (May, 2009). The differential effect of context in zeroacquaintance judgments: More information isn’t always better. Poster presented at the Twenty-first Convention of the Association for Psychological Science. San Francisco, California.

68.

Conchie, S. M., Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. (May, 2009). Emotion-based trust may be the key to leadership success. Poster presented at the Twenty-first Convention of the Association for Psychological Science. San Francisco, California.

69.

Sandham, A., Ormerod, T., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2009). The roles of familiarity, experience and domain in determining the inferences that investigators draw. Presentation given at the Eighth Biennial meeting of the Society for Applied Research in Memory and Cognition. Kyoto, Japan.

70.

Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (December, 2008). Pathways to female terrorism. Presentation given at the Third British National Studies Association annual conference. Exeter, UK.

71.

Wall, H., & Taylor, P. J. (December, 2008). The differential effect of context in zeroacquaintance judgements: Is more information always better? Poster presented at the Faculty of Science and Technology Research Conference. Lancaster, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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72.

Taylor, P. J. (October, 2008). Appliance of science is not appliance of technology: Some findings from geographic profiling and beyond. Invited presentation given at the 2008 “Appliance of Science” National Intelligence Analysts conference.

73.

Bennell, C., Emeno, K., Snook, B., Taylor, P., Goodwill, A. (October, 2008). Fast and frugal geographic profiling revisited: The bar is raised by Bayes? Poster presented at the thirtyseventh annual conference on Police and Criminal Psychology. Walnut Creek, California.

74.

Wall, H., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2008). The differential effect of context in zero-acquaintance judgements: Is more information always better? Poster presented at the Fourteenth European Association of Personality Psychology conference. Estonia. [Runner-up (2nd place) best conference poster award].

75.

Levine, M., Best, R., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2008). Intra-group regulation of violence: Bystanders and the (de)-escalation of violence. Paper presented at the Twenty-first International Association of Conflict Management conference. Chicago, Illinois. [Winner of the best applied conference paper award].

76.

Beune, K., Giebels, E., Taylor, P. J., Sanders, K. (July, 2008). Disentangling the dynamics of investigative interviewing: Influencing behavior and interaction patterns in police interviews with Dutch and Moroccan suspects. Paper presented at the Twenty-first International Association of Conflict Management conference. Chicago, Illinois.

77.

Levine, M., Best, R., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2008). Bystanders, Group Size, and the Informal Regulation of Violence. Paper presented at the Seventh Biennial Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues conference. Chicago, Illinois.

78.

Levine, M., Taylor, P. J., & Best, R. (June, 2008). Groups, bystanders and intervention in emergencies: Behavioural sequences and the informal regulation of violence. Paper presented at European Association of Experimental Social Psychology (EAESP), Opatija Croatia.

79.

Taylor, P. J. (December, 2007). Communication in negotiation. Invited lecture given at Twente University, The Netherlands.

80.

Beauregard, E., Goodwill, A., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (November, 2007). Typologies of sexual murderers: A test of the organized/disorganized model. Presentation given at the ATSA’s 26th Annual Research and Treatment Conference, San Diego, California.

81.

Levine, M., Best, R., & Taylor, P. J. (September, 2007). Bystanders and the informal regulation of violence in the night-time economy. Presentation given at the BPS Division of Social Psychology conference. Kent, UK.

82.

Jacques, K., & Taylor P. J. (September, 2007). Pathways to suicide terrorism: Do women follow in men’s footsteps? Poster presented at the BPS Division of Social Psychology conference. Kent, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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83.

Taylor, A., Snook, B., Haines, A., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (September, 2007). Criminal profiling belief and use: A survey of Canadian police officer opinions. Poster presented at the Annual meeting of the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology, Springfield, Massachusetts.

84.

Levine, M., Best, R., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2007). The intra-group regulation of violence: How bystanders shape the escalation and de-escalation of violence. Presentation at the International Society for Political Psychology conference, Portland, Oregon, USA.

85.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2007). Interaction patterns of social influence in crisis negotiation. Invited symposium presentation at the Twentieth annual International Association of Conflict Management, Budapest, Hungary.

86.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2007). Interaction Patterns in Crisis Negotiations: Persuasive Arguments and Cultural Differences. Paper presented at the Twentieth annual International Association of Conflict Management, Budapest, Hungary. [Winner of the best applied conference paper award]. Paper online at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1100609 (top 10 downloaded articles for 2008)

87.

Emeno, K., Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2007). Clinical versus actuarial approaches to geographic profiling: A meta-analysis. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Psychological Association, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

88.

Mugford, R., Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2007). Science or pseudoscience? A partial order scalogram of police investigative techniques. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Psychological Association, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

89.

Taylor, P. J. (May, 2007). Language use across cultures. Invited presentation at the third annual PASILE conference. Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.

90.

Levine, M., Best, R., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2007). The intra-group regulation of violence: How bystanders shape the escalation and de-escalation of violence. Presentation given at the International Society for Political Psychology conference, Portland, Oregon, USA.

91.

Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., & Snook, B. (May, 2007). Clinical versus actuarial geographic profiling approaches: A meta analysis. Invited presentation at the Fifth National Crime Mapping conference, London.

92.

Johnson, S. J., Watt, L. V., Donald, I. J., Taylor, P. J., Cooper, C. L., & Cartwright, S. (January, 2007). A re-evaluation of the relationship between stress and age using ASSET. Presentation at the BPS Division of Occupational Psychology conference. Bristol, UK.

93.

Beauregard, E., Goodwill, A., Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., (November, 2006). Classification of sexual homicide and sexual murderers: Revisiting the organized/disorganized typology. Presentation at the annual conference of the American Society of Criminology, Los Angeles, California.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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94.

Winter, J., & Taylor, P. J. (November, 2006). The importance of interaction to crime scene typologies. Presentation at the annual conference of the American Society of Criminology, Los Angeles, California.

95.

Taylor, P. J., Snook, B., & Bennell, C. (September, 2006). Evidence of a prioritization heuristic in geographic profiling. Presentation at the BPS Division of Cognitive Psychology annual conference. Lancaster, UK.

96.

Winter, J., & Taylor, P. J. (July, 2006). The importance of the offender-victim interaction in rape. Presentation given at the Second International Summer conference: Research in Forensic Psychiatry. Regensburg, Germany.

97.

Taylor, P. J., Goodwill, A. M., Beauregard, E., Bennell, C., & Snook, B. (June, 2006). Testing the offender profiling paradigm: Can actions predict characteristics? Presentation at the Sixteenth Conference of the European Association of Psychology and Law, Liverpool, UK.

98.

Winter, J., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2006). Towards a typology of crime scene interaction. Presentation at the Sixteenth Conference of the European Association of Psychology and Law, Liverpool, UK.

99.

Jacques, K., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2006). Male and female suicide bombers: Different sexes, different reasons? Poster presented at the Sixteenth Conference of the European Association of Psychology and Law, Liverpool, UK.

100.

Giebels, E., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2006). Cross-cultural differences in patterns of influence. Presentation at the Nineteenth annual conference of the International Association for Conflict Management. Montreal, Canada. (Also symposium co-chair).

101.

Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2006). A general model of reciprocity. Presentation at the Nineteenth annual conference of the International Association for Conflict Management. Montreal, Canada. Paper online at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=913642

102.

Johnson, S. J., Robertson, S., Donald, I., Taylor, P. J., Cooper, C., & Cartwright, S. (January 2006). Stress and productivity: An examination using ASSET. Presentation at the BPS Division of Occupational Psychology annual conference. Glasgow, UK.

103.

Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (October, 2005). Man versus machine: The case of geographic profiling. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Police and Criminal Psychology, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA. [Winner of the Earl Scheafer Best Research Paper Award].

104.

Taylor, P. J. (August, 2005). Crowd control and the use of non-lethal weapons. Panel discussion at the one-day invited European Office of Aerospace Research and Development conference. Soesterberg, Netherlands.

CV – Paul J. Taylor 105.

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Taylor, P. J., & Thomas, S. (June, 2005). Linguistic style matching and negotiation outcome. Paper presented at the Eighteenth annual conference of the International Association for Conflict Management. Seville, Spain. Paper online at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=736244

106.

Ormerod, T., Barrett, E., & Taylor, P. J. (June, 2005). Sensemaking in criminal investigations. Paper presented at the Seventh Naturalistic Decision Making conference, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

107.

Corey, S., Bennell, C., Taylor, P. J., & Snook, B. (June, 2005). The effect of task complexity on predictive accuracy in a geographic profiling task. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Psychological Association, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [Winner of the best poster award] a summary of this poster appeared in Crime Scene, 12, 14-16; the official publication of the Criminal Justice Psychology section of the Canadian Psychological Association.

108.

Bloomfield, S., Bennell, C., Snook, B., & Taylor, P. J. (June 2005). Linking serial burglaries using crime scene behaviours: How do forensic professionals compare to a statistical model? Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Canadian Psychological Association, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

109.

Millet, C., Johnson, S., Cooper, C., Donald, I., Cartwright, S., & Taylor, P. J. (January, 2005). Britain’s most stressful occupations and the role of emotional labour. Paper presented at the BPS Division of Occupational Psychology annual conference. Warwick, UK.

110.

Taylor, P. J., Johnston, S., & Allen, T. (November, 2004). Effects of time pressure and expertise on the accuracy of decision making in suspect prioritisation. Presentation at the Society for Judgement and Decision Making conference. Minneapolis, Minnesota. (also symposium chair).

111.

Snook, B., Bennell, C., & Taylor, P. J. (November, 2004). The impact of a brief training session on the accuracy of officers’ geographic predictions. Presentation at the Society for Judgement and Decision Making conference. Minneapolis, Minnesota.

112.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2004). Hostage-barricade attacks. Invited panel discussion at the Fourth International Conference on the Global Impact of Terrorism. Herzliya, Israel.

113.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2004). Trust in high-risk work settings: Discussant. Invited respondent at the BPS Division of Social Psychology conference. Liverpool, UK.

114.

Taylor, P. J., & Donohue, W. A. (September, 2004). Power and identity in terrorist negotiations. Presentation at the BPS Division of Social Psychology conference. Liverpool, UK. (also symposium chair).

CV – Paul J. Taylor

!24

115.

Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. (September, 2004). The triple-interact as the building block of negotiation. Presentation at the BPS Division of Social Psychology conference. Liverpool, UK. (also symposium chair).

116.

Taylor, P. J. (June, 2004). Negotiation under extreme pressure. Invited panel discussant at the Seventeenth Annual conference of the International Association of Conflict Management. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia.

117.

Taylor, P. J., & Donald, I. (June, 2004). Testing the relationship between local cue-response patterns and global dimensions of communication behavior. Paper presented at Seventeenth Annual conference of the International Association of Conflict Management. Pittsburgh, Philadelphia. Paper online at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=609289

118.

Snook, B., Taylor, P. J., & Bennell, C. (April, 2004). A process and outcome analysis of predictions on a geographic profiling task. Paper presented at the Seventh Annual International Crime Mapping Research conference. Boston, Massachusetts.

119.

Donohue, W. A., & Taylor, P. J. (December, 2003). Role effects in negotiation: The onedown phenomenon. Paper presented at First International Biennale on Negotiation. NEGOCIA, Paris.

120.

Taylor, P. J., Bennell, C., & Snook, B. (July, 2002). Problems of classification in investigative psychology. Paper presented at the Eighth conference of the International Federation of Classification Societies. Cracow, Poland.

121.

Taylor, P. J. (January, 2002). Managing and negotiating crises. Symposium chair at the Sixth International Investigative Psychology conference, University of Liverpool, UK.

122.

Taylor, P. J. (January, 2002). Understanding crisis negotiations. Poster presented at the Sixth International Investigative Psychology conference, University of Liverpool, UK.

123.

Taylor, P. J. (April, 2001). Interpersonal communication in crisis negotiations. Presentation at the BPS Division of Forensic Psychology conference. University of Birmingham, UK.

124.

Taylor, P. J. (March, 2001). Model of communication in crisis negotiations. Poster presented at the House of Commons reception for Britain’s top young researchers. House of Commons, UK.

125.

Taylor, P. J. (January, 2001). A model of communication behaviour in crisis negotiation. Presentation at the Fifth International Investigative Psychology conference, University of Liverpool, UK.

126.

Taylor, P. J. (September, 2000). Modelling communication behaviour in crisis (hostage) negotiations. Presentation at the BPS Division of Forensic Psychology conference, University of Nottingham, UK.

CV – Paul J. Taylor 127.

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Salfati, C. G., & Taylor, P. J. (November, 1999). Differentiating sexual violence: A comparison of sexual homicide and rape. Presentation at the American Society of Criminology conference. Toronto, Canada.

IMPACT PROFILE I have provided advice, training and research reports to large and small companies, as well as to UK government and UK, EU and US law enforcement organisations. Some of these reports have explicated the relevance of current psychological science for policy and practice (e.g., please contact me for examples). Other reports have responded to an operational or strategic need. I have provided independent research-based evaluations, provided consultancy on work initiatives, and provided advise to policy committees and criminal investigations. These activities have led to extensive collaborations in the UK and in North America. The activities also underpin case studies developed and submitted during the UK REF2014 process.

RESEARCH STUDENT SUPERVISION Current PhD Supervision (10 students; primary supervisor unless stated) 2016-

Lynn Weiher (with Kirk Luther). Examining social influence and information provision in human intelligence interviews. CREST studentship.

2016-

Christina Winters (with Kirk Luther). The role of context on the willingness to disclose. CREST studentship.

2015-

Susie Ballentine (with Emma Barrett and Sarah Marsden). Cultural and social routes of community extremism. UK government funding.

2015-

Tom Carrick (with Awais Rashid as primary). The role of communication mimicry in the development of rapport and interpersonal influence. ESRC funded studentship.

2015-

Irina Tache (with Lara Warmelink and Lorraine Hope). Eliciting information and detecting deception in cross-cultural interviews. ESRC funded studentship.

2015-

Feni Kontogianni (with Lorraine Hope as primary, and Aldert Vrij). Information elicitation in intelligence gathering contexts. Portsmouth studentship.

2015-

Emma Hewlett (with Awais Rashid and Utz Roedig). Dynamic policies for shared cyber-physical infrastructures under attack. EPSRC funded studentship.

2014-

Miriam Oostinga (with Ellen Giebels as primary). Because we all make mistakes: Error making and recovery in crisis negotiations. FBI/Twente funded studentship.

2014-

Joanne Curtis (with Stacey Conchie). Does interpersonal sensemaking percolate up or filter down? FBI/Lancaster funded part-time studentship.

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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2013-

Ben Marshall (with Emma Barrett). Jilted lover? Thrill seeker? Money grabber? Peace keeper?: A functional behavioural approach to determining the credibility of high consequence threat reporting. UK Government studentship.

2012-2016

Christos Charitonidis (with Awais Rashid as primary). Weak signals as predictors and influencers of collective action in online social media. Dstl studentship.

Completed PhD Supervision (12 students) 2010-2016

Rachel Reece (with Stuart Kirby as primary). Process of best practice for community engagement. LCPF funded, Part-time.

2012-2015

Steven Nicholson (with Stacey Conchie as primary). Developing a remote measure of trust for group effectiveness and resilience assessment. Distal studentship.

2010-2014

Simon Wells (for MPhil). Interpersonal strategies and sensemaking in crisis situations. MPS funded, Part-time.

2010-2013

Sophie van de Zee. The effect of cognitive load on nonverbal mimicry in interview settings. CPNI funded, Full-time. Now a post-doc at Cambridge University

2009-2014

Katarina MacInnes (with Paul Rayson). Persuasive dynamics of counter-messages. UK Government funded, Full-time. [Kat took maternity leave during her studies]

2009-2013

Iain Hamlin. Personality correlates of non-verbal indicators of deceit. Home Office funded. Full-time. Now a post-doc at Edge Hill University.

2009-2012

Beth Richardson. Verbal strategies for engendering trust. UK Government funded, Full-time. Now a lecturer at UCLan.

2009-2012

Sheryl Prentice (with Paul Rayson). Radicalisation in mainstream media. Home Office funded, Full-time. Now a lecturer at UClan.

2008-2012

Alex Sandham (with Tom Ormerod as primary). Expertise and hypothesis generation in police investigations. EPSRC funded, Part-time. Now a senior research scientist at DSTL.

2008-2011

Helen Wall (with John Dixon). The differential effects of context on personality judgements. UK government funded. Now a post-doc.

2007-2010

Karen Jacques (with Mark Levine). Female terrorism: From description to explanation. ESRC funded. Now working in Government.

2008

Matt Long (with Laurence Alison). Pathways of offending in serious sexual assault. Home Office funded (2nd supervisor until move to Lancaster)

CV – Paul J. Taylor

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Thesis Examination (External) Gordon Wright (2014). PhD. Birkbeck College. Deception-general ability: Individual differences in the ability to lie and to detect lies in others. Chloe Zhang (2014). PhD. University of Warwick. Exploring the effects of situational factors on deception: From forming of intentions to the exhibition of nonverbal behaviours. Shyma Jundi (2013). PhD. University of Portsmouth. Undercover and collective interviewing to detect deception. Lucy Lemanski (2013). PhD. University of Liverpool. A behavioural exploration of single issue terrorist bombing campaigns. Hannah Fawcett (2012). PhD. Sheffield Hallam University. An investigation into deceptive alibi witness testimony. Summer Alston-Smith (2012). PhD. Lincoln University. Psychology patterns and the nature of kidnap offending in the U.K. Angie Scholes (2011). PhD. University of Surrey. Understanding political assassinations: a behavioural analysis. Karlijn Beune (2009). PhD. University of Twente. Talking Heads: Interviewing suspects from a cultural perspective.

TEACHING MSc and UG Supervision 201220082008-2013 2004-2007 20052004-2006 2002-

Dissertation supervision for MSc in Psychology of Conflict, Risk and Safety (Twente) Dissertation supervision for MSc in Research Methods and MSc in Social Psychology Dissertation supervision for MSc in Investigative Expertise Dissertation supervision for MSc in Investigative Psychology and MSc in Research Methods (Liverpool) Personal Tutees for Undergraduates (Liverpool and Lancaster) Year 2: Small Group Practical supervisor (Liverpool) Year 3: Final year projects supervisor (Liverpool and Lancaster)

Applied and Social Psychology Teaching 2013201320122008-2011 2008-2011

MSc: Forensic Psychology (Twente) MSc: Psychology and Safety (Twente) Year 2: Personality and individual differences MSc: Psychology of investigative practices MSc: Crime and criminal behaviour

CV – Paul J. Taylor 2008-2011 2009-2012 2009-2012 20082004-2006 2001-2007

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MSc: Special topics in applied psychology Year 3: Advanced social psychology Year 3: Professional skills Year 3: Forensic and investigative psychology Year 3: Applied and organisational psychology (Liverpool) MSc: Criminal Behaviour (Liverpool)

Research Methods and Statistics 2008-2013 2005-2009 2005-2006 2004-2006 2002-2006 2000-2002 1999-2003

MSc: Investigative research techniques MSc: Advanced Statistics (Liverpool) Coordinator and lecturer on first-year UG research methods MSc: Research skills (Liverpool) North West Consortium (Liverpool) UG Practicals in research methods (Liverpool) MSc Practicals in statistics for MSc programmes (Liverpool)

Professional 2012-2013 2011 2010 2009 2006-2008 2006 2002-2007 20012001-2002 2000-2002

One week course (and further 3 day add on) communication skills training for the US government One day CPD on forensic linguistics Contributor to two day kidnap negotiation training delivered to UK government Three day CPD on forensic linguistics Ministry of Defence training on methodology to contemporary topics in social/ cognitive psychology Co-developed a short course on negotiation and critical incident management for Police crisis negotiators Guest lecture on MSc in Security Studies (Cranfield University) HMP Hostage negotiator advisor training (HMP college, Newbold Revel) Workforce training in communication and safety (National Grid, PLC) Hostage incident security training (Ashworth Hospital, Merseyside)

ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE University administration 2015-

Director of the Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats (CREST). The Centre champions the activities of 93 academic, post-doc and PhD researchers in 5 core programmes and 10 commissioned projects (increasing to ~20 in 2017). Adjunct to this are 9 professional staff who produce communication outputs, oversee media relations, manage an international stakeholder engagement programme, and deliver the centre’s governance and administration. CREST serves as the national hub for behavioural and social science research for the UK security and intelligence agencies.

CV – Paul J. Taylor 2015 2011-

20092005-2006 2004-2005

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Faculty of Science representative on University Research Ethics Committee Director of Security Lancaster. This cross-faculty centre is being considered for Institute status at an upcoming Senate. My contributions include working with Dr Prince on strategic relationships (e.g., Raytheon partnership), extending our international connectivity (e.g., with MIT), and running the ECR focused small grant scheme, seminar series, and annual cyber security challenge. In AY14/15, Security-Lancaster published 111 international peer reviewed articles, secured £7.44M of funding, and it grew the PGR community by 20 students, largely through industry funding. Psychology representative on Faculty’s Business and industrial relations committee Faculty of Science and Engineering Joint Information Services Committee representative for psychology (Liverpool) Tutor for University Halls accommodation. Provided pastoral care for 1yr UG in accommodation and contribute to site administration

Department administration 20162014-2015 2010-2015 20112009-2013 20092008-2011 2006-2008 2005-2006 2004-2006

Director of Research, Department of Psychology Leader of the Department’s Social Processes research group Department’s business and enterprise ‘champion,’ member of Research Committee, and coordinator of mock REF2014 impact submission Coordinator of Department’s HEIF-5 funding Director of the Department’s Investigative Expertise Unit (core research group) Member of Department’s research committee and management group Director of MSc in Investigative Expertise (intake ~14FTE) Director of the MSc in Research Methods (ESRC-recognised; intake ~12FTE) Library and resources liaison for psychology (Liverpool) First Year UG Studies Coordinator (Liverpool). Encompassed full-time BSc courses, BSc/BA combined honours, and a 2+2 pathway