College of Humanities and Social Sciences staff

Dr Ross Hebden staff profile picture

Contact details +6469516608

Dr Ross Hebden PhD

Lecturer

School of Psychology

Professional

Contact details

  • Ph: 85087
    Location: 3.31, Psychology building
    Campus: Turitea

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy - Massey University (2023)

Research Expertise

Research Interests

Media Psychology and Communications Technologies,

Advertising and Marketing,

Board Games

Young Adult Drinking Cultures

Alcohol and Public Health Interventions. 

Sociality 

Thematics

21st Century Citizenship, Resource Development and Management, Design – for Commerce, Community and Culture, Health and Well-being

Area of Expertise

Field of research codes
Communications Technologies (100500):
Information And Computing Sciences (080000):
Languages, Communication And Culture (200000):
Psychology (170100): Psychology And Cognitive Sciences (170000):
Studies In Human Society (160000):
Technology (100000)

Research Outputs

Journal

Hebden, R., Lyons, AC., Goodwin, I., & McCreanor, T. (2015). "when You Add Alcohol, It Gets That Much Better": University Students, Alcohol Consumption, and Online Drinking Cultures. Journal of Drug Issues. 45(2), 214-226
[Journal article]Authored by: Hebden, R., McCreanor, T.

Thesis

Hebden, R. (2011). Tertiary student drinking culture, Facebook and alcohol advertising : Collapsing boundaries between social life and commercialised consumption. (Master's Thesis)
[Masters Thesis]Authored by: Hebden, R.Edited by: McCreanor, T.

Conference

Hebden, R., Lyons, A., Goodwin, I., Niland, P., & McCreanor, T. (2012). Mixing alcohol and social media: Young adults and drinking cultures. PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH. Vol. 27: PSYCHOLOGY & HEALTH
[Conference Paper in Published Proceedings]Authored by: Hebden, R., McCreanor, T.

Teaching and Supervision

Summary of Doctoral Supervision

Position Current Completed
Co-supervisor 1 0

Current Doctoral Supervision

Co-supervisor of:

  • Brandon McMurtrie - Doctor of Philosophy
    Social Identity, Affective Polarization and belief in Conspiracies