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Richard Howard

Associate Professor and Reader in Personality Disorders, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

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Biography

Born in France, but brought up and educated in UK. Emigrated in 1987 but was re-patriated in 2005 having "done time" in New Zealand (Dunedin and Wellington) and Singapore as an itinerant academic.

Expertise Summary

  • Recording of brain event-related potentials ("brain waves").
  • Recording of physiological parameters of sleep.

Teaching Summary

Currently teaches on the Forensic Masters/ Doctorate, mostly on personality disorders. In the past has taught in the areas of cognitive neuroscience, forensic psychology, abnormal psychology, and… read more

Research Summary

As a forensic behavioural neuroscientist, I am interested in understanding how individual characteristics, and neuropsychological characteristics in particular, interact with the environment to… read more

Recent Publications

Currently teaches on the Forensic Masters/ Doctorate, mostly on personality disorders. In the past has taught in the areas of cognitive neuroscience, forensic psychology, abnormal psychology, and biological psychology.

Current Research

As a forensic behavioural neuroscientist, I am interested in understanding how individual characteristics, and neuropsychological characteristics in particular, interact with the environment to produce criminal and antisocial behaviour. Most importantly: what might be done to prevent such behaviour in the future?

Particular areas of interest are the following:

  1. The "functional link" between personality disorder and dangerousness How are personality disorder and dangerousness related? What mechanisms mediate the link? Is early-onset substance abuse (particularly alcohol abuse) critically involved in the genesis of antisocial behaviour, and how does it interact with childhood conduct disorder?
  2. Neurophysiological substrates of antisocial personality and disinhibition What brain mechanisms are involved in antisocial personality? And can one change brain function in personality disordered individuals to make them less dangerous? One ongoing study is piloting a biofeedback intervention to treat personality disordered patients. Its focus is on reduction of impulsiveness, measured cortically with event-related brain potentials, observationally by nurse ratings, and subjectively using a self-report measure of state impulsivity.
  3. Different types of violence: their relation to emotion regulation and their functions In terms of its motivation, how can one best parse violence? What functional role does each type of violence play, e.g. in regulating emotion? Does excitement seeking play a particular role in relation to violence?

School of Community Health Sciences

The University of Nottingham
Medical School
Nottingham, NG7 2UH

telephone: +44 (0) 115 823 0208
fax: +44 (0) 115 823 0214
email: chs-enquiries@nottingham.ac.uk