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British Science Association

Countdown is on to British Science Festival in Southampton Insight into action – exploring the Public Attitudes to Science Survey Celebrating British Science Week 6-15 March 2026 British Science Association selected as the future host of EDIS APPG on Diversity & Inclusion in STEM launches new project on AI equity Smashing Stereotypes is back for British Science Week 2026 Guest blog: Community Led Research Pilot, funder’s reflections Public Attitudes to Science Survey shows the public values science, but highlights concerns over AI, quality of information, and representation Sir Roland Jackson Putting communities in the driving seat: report explores impact of participatory research Dr Alex Lathbridge and Karen Blake MBE named British Science Association Honorary Fellows 2025: Our past year, wrapped A-Level student builds highly-accurate budget Sign-Language-to-speech wrist technology A cautious welcome for key recommendations in Curriculum and Assessment Review Confidence and support to teach science has fallen, primary education report suggests 'It’s through change that science progresses’: Disabled staff in science and medicine lead action for equity Reflections on the British Science Festival in Liverpool Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge's presidential address Report highlights disconnect between data collection and action on EDI in UK science and tech sector CREST website upgraded to transform STEM learning and empower educators across the UK Robo-chemists, eye-trackers and a VR fishing boat: the last day of the British Science Festival 2025 Phages, geophonics and prosthetics: the fourth day of British Science Festival 2025 Whale song, urban farming and science comedy: the third day of the British Science Festival 2025 Climate solutions, pioneering women and particle detectors: the second day of the British Science Festival 2025 Chatbots, ghost particles and neurodiversity: the first day of the British Science Festival 2025 Supporting inclusive entrepreneurship and innovation among and through micro, small and medium sized enterprises (M-SMEs) CREST Awards now free for all young people in Scotland The power of plants: eight events to dig into at this year’s British Science Festival Five health and humanity highlights from this year’s British Science Festival Exploring the wonders of space: five unmissable British Science Festival events ‘Early and meaningful’ public involvement in shaping engineering biology research and policy vital What's it like to work at the British Science Festival as an Evaluations Assistant? 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Children at risk of grooming in as little as 18 minutes
2016-09-07 · via British Science Association

Children could become the victims of online chat room grooming in as little as 18 minutes, according to Swansea University academics speaking at the British Science Festival.

This is just one of several findings of the Online Grooming Communication Project (OGC), led by Professor Nuria Lorenzo-Dus and Dr Cristina Izura, which studied the language used in the online interactions of 192 convicted groomers, amounting to over 250 million words,

The researchers identified four processes that take place from point of contact with the child. The first is ‘deceptive/trust development’ activities, such as giving compliments to the child. The next is ‘compliance testing’ using reverse psychology, followed by mental or physical isolation. These lead up to sexual gratification for the abuser, which can be online or offline. Researchers emphasise that these processes can happen at the same time, which means that grooming does not necessarily need to take place over a long period. The fastest recorded time was 18 minutes of conversation and the slowest recorded time was 82 hours.

The language used by groomers to connect with children is far more subtle and non-sexual than we would perhaps think, as they try to develop an emotional bond with their victims and persuade, rather than coerce, them. This finding suggests that existing computer software used to monitor and catch online groomers would not flag up these conversations as they are designed to detect only particular types of vocabulary.

The groomers were relatively truthful about their age, generally only knocking off five years. They do not try to hide the fact that they are adults from their young victims. In this sample, the real ages of the groomers were between 21 and 65, whereas their ‘staged’ ages were 16-61. This raises questions about why children might continue these conversations and whether some children are more at risk than others.

In fact, no research so far has been able to establish a particular victim profile. Prof. Lorenzo-Dus emphasises, “All children are potentially at risk from being groomed online because all children regularly use the internet.”

She explained that it is less about home and family circumstances and more about the curiosity that the online world provokes.

Although the grooming conversations analysed as part of the research took place not with children, but with adults who were specially trained to play the roles of children online, the researchers are confident that their work so far has given new insight into the strategies of online groomers. They hope to continue this work in order to help inform development of more effective software.

Speaking about the importance of research to help protect children online, Prof. Lorenzo-Dus said, “It is our plea to move this forward by accessing an equally large corpus of data with real children, but this is incredibly difficult in the UK context. We have been trying for three years!”

The researchers have already begun working with law-enforcement, schools, and parents to help them better identify signs of inappropriate online communication.

Dr Rowenna Baldwin is a Manchester Metropolitan University Media Fellow. She is a Senior Research Assistant at the MMU Policy Evaluation and Research Unit.

Image credit: Amancay Maahs via Flickr