mark moss

mark moss

Northumbria University

H-index: 30

Europe-United Kingdom

About mark moss

mark moss, With an exceptional h-index of 30 and a recent h-index of 19 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Northumbria University, specializes in the field of Aromas mood cognition.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Exploring the Impact of Safer Sports Betting Promotion on Social Media: An Experimental Study

Aroma of the essential oil of peppermint reduces aggressive driving behaviour in healthy adults

Frequent gamblers’ perceptions of the role of gambling marketing in their behaviour: An interpretative phenomenological analysis

Assessing the bets advertised on Twitter by gambling operators and gambling affiliates–an observational study incorporating simulation data to measure bet success

To Blend or Not to Blend? Anxiety Buffering Effects of Essential Oil Aromas

Examining the role of employability as a mediator in the relationship between psychological capital and objective career success amongst occupational psychology professionals

Comparing football bettors' response to social media marketing differing in bet complexity and account type–An experimental study

Positive massage: An intervention for couples’ wellbeing in a touch-deprived era

mark moss Information

University

Position

Head of Department of Psychology

Citations(all)

3608

Citations(since 2020)

1339

Cited By

2788

hIndex(all)

30

hIndex(since 2020)

19

i10Index(all)

39

i10Index(since 2020)

32

Email

University Profile Page

Northumbria University

Google Scholar

View Google Scholar Profile

mark moss Skills & Research Interests

Aromas mood cognition

Top articles of mark moss

Title

Journal

Author(s)

Publication Date

Exploring the Impact of Safer Sports Betting Promotion on Social Media: An Experimental Study

Journal of Gambling Studies

Scott Houghton

Mark Moss

2024/1/19

Aroma of the essential oil of peppermint reduces aggressive driving behaviour in healthy adults

Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Experimental

Mark Moss

Jasmine Ho

Sophie Swinburne

Anna Turner

2023/3

Frequent gamblers’ perceptions of the role of gambling marketing in their behaviour: An interpretative phenomenological analysis

Plos one

Scott Houghton

Georgia Punton

Emma Casey

Andrew McNeill

Mark Moss

2023/6/16

Assessing the bets advertised on Twitter by gambling operators and gambling affiliates–an observational study incorporating simulation data to measure bet success

International Gambling Studies

Scott Peter Benjamin Houghton

Mark Moss

2023/5/4

To Blend or Not to Blend? Anxiety Buffering Effects of Essential Oil Aromas

American Journal of Plant Sciences

Sophie Swinburne

Samantha Bowerbank

Mark Moss

2023/3/23

Examining the role of employability as a mediator in the relationship between psychological capital and objective career success amongst occupational psychology professionals

Frontiers in Psychology

Vicki Elsey

Beatrice Van der Heijden

Michael A Smith

Mark Moss

2022/12/14

Comparing football bettors' response to social media marketing differing in bet complexity and account type–An experimental study

Journal of Behavioral Addictions

Scott Houghton

Mark Moss

2021/10/5

Positive massage: An intervention for couples’ wellbeing in a touch-deprived era

European Journal of Investigation in Health, Psychology and Education

Sayuri M Naruse

Mark Moss

2021/5/23

‘To give is better than to receive?’Couples massage significantly benefits both partners’ wellbeing

Journal of Health Psychology

Sayuri M Naruse

Piers L Cornelissen

Mark Moss

2020/9

Affiliate marketing of sports betting–a cause for concern?

International Gambling Studies

Scott Houghton

Mark Moss

Emma Casey

2020/5/3

Oxygen administration and acute human cognitive enhancement: Higher cognitive demand leads to a more rapid decay of transient hyperoxia

Journal of Cognitive Enhancement

Andrew B Scholey

Sarah Benson

Shirley Sela-Venter

Marlou Mackus

Mark C Moss

2020/3

Becoming a professional: The five pillars of identification in Occupational Psychology in the UK

EWOP in Practice

Vicki Elsey

Neill Thompson

Elizabeth Sillence

Laura Longstaff

Mark Moss

2020/10/20

See List of Professors in mark moss University(Northumbria University)

Co-Authors

H-index: 51
Nick Neave

Nick Neave

Northumbria University

H-index: 48
Piers L Cornelissen

Piers L Cornelissen

Northumbria University

H-index: 44
Pam Briggs

Pam Briggs

Northumbria University

H-index: 39
Jason G Ellis

Jason G Ellis

Northumbria University

H-index: 35
Mark A Wetherell

Mark A Wetherell

Northumbria University

H-index: 29
Thomas Heffernan

Thomas Heffernan

Northumbria University

academic-engine