Campbell McDonogh
Campbell McDonogh is a Provisional Psychologist and Clinical Masters/PhD Candidate at the University of New South Wales. His research interests surround understanding how empathy and social behaviours emerge from the interaction between a child and their caregiver in the early years of life and how the quality of these parent-child interactions can predict a range of childhood outcomes, including behavioural expression and emotional processing.
Campbell completed a Bachelor of Science in Psychology and Bachelor of Psychological Science with First Class Honours at UNSW, researching the aetiology of auditory hallucinations in those with schizophrenia. His PhD research will examine biobehavioural synchrony between parents and children with conduct problems and varying levels of callous-unemotional traits, with a focus on observing parent-child interaction through start-of-the-art naturalistic eye tracking technologies.
Campbell is involved in the assessment and diagnosis of behavioural disorders for early intervention and treatment, and has experience working with a range of families and their children.