I’m interested in the cognitive mechanisms that allow people to flexibly communicate, collaborate, and coordinate with one another. I work on these problems using interactive, multi-player web experiments and computational models of language and social reasoning. Here’s a recent workshop talk that is reasonably representative.
I am thrilled to be starting as an assistant professor of Psychology at UW-Madison in Fall 2023 and eager to recruit graduate students this cycle, so please get in touch if interested!
I was formerly a C.V. Starr Postdoctoral Fellow at the Princeton Neuroscience Institute, I defended my dissertation in the Department of Psychology at Stanford in 2019, I graduated from Indiana University in 2014 with degrees in Mathematics and Cognitive Science, and I spent the summers of 2012 and 2013 as an Edward A. Knapp Undergraduate Fellow at the Santa Fe Institute.
I strongly believe that the best work is done in collaboration. Below are just a few of my own collaborator-mentors, and here’s my attempt to articulate an (aspirational) way of thinking about mentorship as a special type of collaborative relationship, which I try to pass forward to my own mentees.
- Judith Degen (Stanford)
- Judith Fan (UCSD)
- Michael Frank (Stanford)
- Michael Franke (Tübingen)
- Adele Goldberg (Princeton)
- Rob Goldstone (Indiana)
- Noah Goodman (Stanford)
- Tom Griffiths (Princeton)
- Hyo Gweon (Stanford)
- Abhilasha Kumar (Bowdoin)
- Minae Kwon (Stanford)
- Ashley Leung (Chicago)
- Sonia Murthy (Harvard)
- Dorsa Sadigh (Stanford)
- Kenny Smith (Edinburgh)
- Ted Sumers (Princeton)
- Taka Yamakoshi (UTokyo)