The Faculty of Psychology, Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM), held the Cross-Cultural Understanding (CCU) program on August 13–14, 2025, to welcome 23 exchange students from nine countries. This activity is part of the Student Mobility program designed to support the academic and social adaptation of international students during their one-semester stay at UGM.
SDGs
Yogyakarta, 14 August 2025 – A research team from the Faculty of Psychology, Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) has once again drawn attention from the global academic community through a bibliometric study mapping global trends in EEG-based (electroencephalography) hypnosis research. The study highlights how hypnosis is increasingly understood as a measurable neurophysiological process.
Published in the prestigious American Journal of Psychology, the research was authored by doctoral student in Psychology, Martaria Rizky Rinaldi, with the supervision team consisting of Dr. Nida Ul Hasanat, M.Si., Prof. Kwartarini Wahyu Yuniarti, M.Med.Sc., Ph.D., and in collaboration with Prof. Gilles van Luijtelaar from the Donders Centre for Cognition, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. The team conducted a bibliometric analysis of 135 international Scopus-indexed publications as of 24 January 2025. Using VOSviewer, they identified research trends, leading authors and institutions, country contributions, and keyword networks related to EEG-based hypnosis studies.
Yogyakarta – Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) has once again proven its reputation as a world-class research university. Based on the results of a bibliometric study published in the Record and Library Journal, 104 UGM faculty articles related to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are listed as highly cited articles in the Scopus database. The article was authored through a cross-unit collaboration of UGM administrative staff (Tendik), namely Syahrul (Faculty of Psychology), Purwoko (Faculty of Engineering), Winarsih (Faculty of Geography), and Maryono (UGM Library and Archives).
The article, titled “The Most Cited Article on Sustainable Development Goals: A Bibliometric Analysis”, analyzed 17,834 publications containing the keyword “SDGs” in Scopus as of May 31, 2024. Among them, UGM publications stood out for their strong interdisciplinary contributions, ranging from public health, renewable energy technology, environmental management, to food security.
The Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) hosted a Comprehensive Review Training led by the Joanna Briggs Institute (JBI) from July 29 to 31, 2025. Organized by the Indonesian Association of Psychology Higher Education Providers (AP2TPI), the event welcomed 30 participants from various universities across Indonesia. The training was facilitated directly by Dr. Sonia Hines and Dr. Romy Jia from the University of Adelaide, Australia.
The training equipped participants with essential skills to systematically review different types of evidence, with the goal of providing a strong evidence base to support decision-making in healthcare. The program combined both theory and hands-on practice, where participants learned to formulate focused research questions, search for relevant literature, critically appraise, and synthesize evidence from studies.
Yogyakarta – The Center for Public Mental Health (CPMH) of the Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM) once again held an online lecture titled “Childhood Footprints: The Impact of Adverse Experiences and the Power of Positive Experiences” on Friday (07/18). The theme explored how childhood experiences affect mental health and how positive experiences can counteract painful ones.
In her presentation, Diana Setiyawati, S.Psi., MHSc., Ph.D., Psychologist, a lecturer at UGM’s Faculty of Psychology, emphasized that life stress alone is not the sole cause of mental disorders.
Yogyakarta, July 30, 2025 – Martaria Rizky Rinaldi, Prof. Gilles van Luijtelaar, Dr. Nida Ul Hasanat, M.Si., Psikolog, and Prof. Dra. Kwartarini Wahyu Yuniarti, M.Med.Sc., Ph.D., Psikolog have successfully published their research titled “Clinical Hypnosis for Chronic Illnesses: A Scoping Review of Randomized Controlled Trials” in the International Journal of Clinical and Experimental, a reputable Scopus-indexed international journal (Q2) with a 2024 SJR of 0.677 and an Impact Factor (IF) of 2.4.
The Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada, through its Publication Unit, recently held a capacity-building event titled “Workshop on Manuscript Conversion Strategies for Book Publication” on Friday, July 25, 2025. Conducted online via Zoom Meeting, the workshop was attended by lecturers, researchers, and postgraduate students actively engaged in academic writing within the Faculty of Psychology UGM.
The workshop featured Abdur Rahim, S.S., M.Pd., Head of Cooperation, Manuscript Acquisition, and Senior Editor at Intrans Publishing, as the main speaker and was hosted and moderated by Syahrul Fauzi, S.Pt., M.Pd. This activity was designed as part of the faculty’s ongoing efforts to disseminate scientific knowledge, aiming to ensure that academic papers and research manuscripts do not remain merely as academic documents, but are further developed into scientific books accessible to a broader academic and professional audience.
For many postgraduate students, graduation is not always accompanied by clarity regarding their career direction. After completing a master's degree, it is not uncommon for graduates to feel uncertain or lack a clear picture of their next professional steps. The dilemma of choosing between becoming an academic, a practitioner, or even venturing into a different field altogether often becomes a unique challenge.
To address this need, the Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada, through the Psychology UGM Career Center, held a postgraduate graduation preparation session titled "Beyond Graduation: Careers, Skills, and Contributions of Psychology Postgraduates" on Monday (July 21). Held in Room B-104 of the Faculty of Psychology, the event was attended by 44 prospective master’s degree graduates and took place from 10:00 to 12:30 WIB.
The Islamic Psychology Study Group (Kelompok Kajian Psikologi Islam/KKPI) of the Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM), in collaboration with the Indonesian Family Advocacy Institute (Lembaga Advokasi Keluarga Indonesia/LAKI), held a Parenting Principles Workshop on July 19, 2025, in room D-303 of the Faculty of Psychology UGM, from 09.00 to 16.00 WIB. The workshop was led by Dr. Bagus Riyono, M.A., Psychologist, a lecturer at UGM and author of the book "4 Prinsip Parenting" ("The 4 Parenting Principles"). A pre-workshop was held online via YouTube from July 12–18. The main workshop was attended by 23 offline participants and 20 online participants.
The workshop was initiated in response to the widespread adoption of psychological theories—many of which remain contested—that are often taken up and applied by the public. When these theories are adopted without adequate understanding, they can create new problems and lead to increased confusion among parents about their children's behavior. This workshop focused on fundamental and essential parenting principles, rather than superficial tips, enabling parents to apply them across various family contexts and child conditions.
The Faculty of Psychology at Universitas Gadjah Mada (UGM), in collaboration with TVRI Yogyakarta, has once again presented the “OPSI: Obrolan Psikologi” (Psychology Talks) program, now in its eighth episode, aired on Tuesday, July 15, 2025, from 3:00 to 4:00 PM. This episode carried the theme “Online Gender-Based Violence: Caring Together, Protecting Together”, discussing the importance of collective awareness in preventing sexual violence in digital spaces. This increasingly prevalent issue in the digital age must continue to be addressed through public education efforts to help create online environments that are safe, equitable, and free from gender-based violence.
Online Gender-Based Violence (OGBV) is a form of sexual violence that occurs in digital spaces and can affect anyone—from children to the elderly. This was conveyed by Lucia Peppy Novianti, M.Psi., Psychologist, a clinical and forensic psychologist as well as a doctoral candidate at UGM. She emphasized that individuals with low digital literacy, especially children and adolescents, are particularly vulnerable to becoming victims because they may not yet be able to distinguish between original content and manipulated content such as AI-edited materials.