 So ma research is looking at factors that help to protect against sexual offending. So a large part of the work we do in the criminal justice field is predicting who's going to go on to re-offend and who isn't. And we're getting pretty good at it, but there's still room for improvement. So for example, out of every 10 people that we deem to be at high risk of sexual offending, around 2 or 3 of those will be reconvicted within 5 years. Now that has led us to wonder, what's going on for those other 7 or 8 people? Are there things that are going on in their life that's helping to protect them against their high level of risk? So we know for example from research that people who have increased rates of pro-social support are less likely to re-offend than those who don't. Okay, so that one approach is taking a number of factors like that that have already been linked scientifically to reduce rates of re-offending, putting them together into a measure and seeing if that improves our ability to tell who's going to go on to re-offend and who's not. The other approach we're taking is a theoretical approach. So we're using something called the Good Lives Model that says we all have these same inherent basic human needs that we're all striving for, including you and I. But that when people sexually offend it's in the pursuit of those basic needs, but something goes wrong. So they're not able to meet those needs in a pro-social way. So what we're doing is we're looking at how people are going about meeting those basic needs. So for things like their need for relationships, their need for pleasure, their need for inner peace or freedom from stress. We've got ethical approval to do our research and we're just in the process of setting up who we can recruit as participants, trying to figure out how to actually go about doing this logistically.