Early Career Research Award Talk
Templeton, A. (2022, 6 September). Using social psychological theory and methods to inform models of collective behaviour for crowd management. [BPS SPS Early Career Research Award talk]. BPS Social Psychology Section 2022 Annual Conference, London, UK. Social Psychology Section Annual Conference 2022 - The British Psychological Society (bps.org.uk)
Keynote presentations
Templeton, A. (2023, November 16). How and why the public responds in emergencies: A behavioural science approach. Women Talking Fire Conference, Leeds. The slides can be accessed here.
Templeton, A. (2022, February). The (mis)use of controversial terminologies in evacuation research. Paper given at the International Association for Fire Safety Science: Human Behaviour in Fires Working Group, online. The talk can be watched here
Templeton, A., (2021, November). Bringing together knowledge from social psychology and pedestrian modelling: moving towards evidence-based models of collective behaviour. Paper given at the 2021 Pedestrian and Evacuation Dynamics conference, Australia. The talk can be watched here
Templeton, A. (2019, February). The case for including group relations in pedestrian models of contraflow. Paper given at Modelling and Calibration of Pedestrian Dynamics, Warwick.
Templeton, A. (2018, November). The role of social identity in group memberships. Paper presented at Social membership in the natural world, Paris.
Templeton, A. (2018, March). Crowd behaviour and emergency management. Paper given at Local Authority Building Control workshop, Manchester.
Templeton, A. (2018, February). Improving crowd resilience – using social identity to enhance detection and response to threats. Paper given at the Defence and Security Accelerator workshop, London.
Templeton, A. (2017, November). Understanding the crowd: The role of group identity in facilitating collective behaviour. Paper given at KCDC Olympics Symposium and Workshop, Seoul.
Templeton, A. (2017, October). Crowd psychology & behaviour: Placing social identity into computer models. Paper given at 3rd International Conference on Mass Gatherings Medicine Riyadh.