People

Social Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory

Jean Decety

Jean Decety (Ph.D. in Neuroscience-Medicine) is Irving B. Harris Distinguished Professor at the University of Chicago and the College. He is the Director of the Social Cognitive Neuroscience Lab and the Child Neurosuite. Decety’s research relies on integrating knowledge across multiple levels of analyses, the perspective that characterizes social neuroscience. He also highly values teaching undergraduates as it motivates him to think about the long road, and find meaningful links with other disciplines including evolutionary psychology, economics, sociology and political science.

email: decety [AT] uchicago.edu

Abdulaziz Alhothi

Abdulaziz grew up in Qatar. He obtained a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Texas A&M University with a minor in Mathematics. He is a MAPSS candidate seeking to examine the driving factors of how people perceive their own moral values and how empathy intervenes in moral decision-making. Coming from a rapidly developing country in terms of politics and religion, Abdulaziz is particularly interested in exploring the validity and reliability of various ways to measure moral decision-making in the context of Arab and Islamic societies.

email: a.alhothi [AT] gmail.com

Qiongwen (Jovie) Cao

Qiongwen (Jovie) received her B.A. in Psychology and Neuroscience from the University of Southern California, where she studied the effects of attribute salience on intertemporal choice. Jovie is a Ph.D. student in the Integrative Neuroscience program interested in morality and social decision-making. Specifically, she examines how social context and culture affect moral decisions and the valuations of human lives. Jovie’s work combines behavioral economics, eye-tracking, and cognitive neuroscience to understand the underlying mechanisms of moral decisions.

email: qiongwenc [AT] uchicago.edu

Jie Chen

Jie is a Ph.D. student in Computational Neuroscience. She obtained her bachelor’s degree in Sociology and Applied Psychology from the University of California Santa Barbara. Before joining UChicago’s PhD, Jie worked as a Lab Manager in Yu’s Emotion Science Lab at UC Santa Barbara studying value-based decision-making in various social contexts. She is interested in understanding the neural and computational mechanisms underlying moral values involved in decision-making. She is particularly interested  in how moral conviction in medical practice.

email: jchen28 [AT] uchicago.edu

Michael Cohen

Michael Cohen earned a Ph.D. in Cognitive Neuroscience from UCLA, and has had prior postdoctoral training at Northwestern University and University of Pennsylvania. Much of his prior work has used behavioral and fMRI methods to examine effects of conscious strategies and non-strategic effects of reward when people learn information of varying importance. In the SCNL, Michael uses fMRI, cognitive science methods and computational modeling to examine how moral convictions motivate political activism and political violence.

email: mscohen [AT] uchicago.edu

Elodie Corvaisier

Elodie is a doctoral student in Economics. She holds a Master in International Economy and Development from University Paris Dauphine. Elodie studies the impact of forced displacement on children’s social preferences in the Sahel region of Africa. She also examines the perceptions of harmful gender social norms among adolescents and their parents, specifically early forced child marriage and female genital mutilation in conjunction with the role of personal norms, normative beliefs, and empirical beliefs

Email: corvaisier [AT] gate.cnrs.fr

Charlotte Dai

Charlotte is currently pursuing a Master’s degree in Statistics at the University of Chicago. She earned her B.S. degree in Mathematics from the University of Washington, Seattle. Charlotte examines the evolution of public attitudes toward assisted dying and euthanasia in the United States from 1920 to 2020. She uses advanced natural language processing (NLP) and machine learning techniques investigate the rapid shifts in public opinion and identify the key events or incidents that triggered these changes on attitudes toward assisted dying.

Email: dcar [AT] uchicago.edu

Joey Epstein

Joey is a MAPSS QMSA student at the University of Chicago, holding a BA in Philosophy and an MA in Global Security Studies from Johns Hopkins University. He is published in Clio’s Psyche and has participated in multiple psychology consortia. His current research focuses on formally modeling belief dynamics, particularly how tolerance for conflicting information influences both the likelihood of engagement and the extent of belief change when receptive.

email: jhe4 [AT] uchicago.edu

 Andrew Koller

Andrew, a MAPSS student at the University of Chicago, earned a bachelor’s from DePaul University, double majoring in psychology and philosophy. As a research assistant in Dr. Graupmann’s social psychology lab and a student of Nietzsche under Dr. Kirkland, he developed a deep interest in how moral values and empathy affect decision-making in medicine. Andrew explores this topic within the context of medical doctors responding to patients requesting assisted dying. Beyond academia, he enjoys cooking, traveling, photography, coding, and machine learning.

email: koller [AT] uchicago.edu

Joanna Li

Joanna received her B.A. from Georgetown University, where she studied Psychology and Biology under the mentorship of Dr. Abigail Marsh. Currently, she is a MAPSS student whose research centers on altruism, prosocial decision-making, and moral psychology. In particular, she is captivated by the mechanisms that drive compassion–especially to extraordinary degrees. She is a big fan of open science, Hank Green, and Jeopardy.

email: ll1123 [AT] uchicago.edu

Haocheng Ma

Haocheng was a MAPSS student at the University of Chicago and is now a research assistant at New York University. He received his B.S. in Engineering and Psychology from National Yang Ming Chiao Tung University, Taiwan. He previously worked as a research assistant at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and the Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. He also studied at Osaka University and Hokkaido University in Japan. Haocheng is interested in developmental science, empathy, moral reasoning, and cognitive science. He enjoys scuba diving and swimming. 

email: hm3135 [AT] nyu.edu

Undergraduate students

Ava Cho
Fourth year at the College
Majoring in Neuroscience and Psychology

Sophie Feng
First year at the College
Majoring in Cognitive Science

 Amelia Gibbs
Fourth year at the College
Majoring in Cognitive Science and Economics

Aseem Gidwani
Second year at the College
Majoring in Neuroscience

 

 

Hina Masuda-Singh 
Second year at the College
Majoring in Neuroscience and Psychology

Nishtha Sharma
Third year at the College
Majoring in Economics

Katie ODonnell
Fourth year at the College
Majoring in Neuroscience and Psychology

Fun facts about us

Two-third of lab members have either lived or visited Hong Kong several times. Many of us have relatives and/or lived in Malaysia, Australia, China, Singapore, Sweden, Hong Kong, Israel, France, South Africa, United Kingdom and the US.
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English is obviously our lingua franca, but Arabic, Cantonese, Mandarin, Hindi, French, Hebrew, Polish, Urdu, Swedish and Japanese are also spoken.

Collaborations

Marie Claire Villeval 🇫🇷
Experimental economics
CNRS-Lyon University, France

Winnifred Louis 🇦🇺
Social psychology
University of Queensland, Australia

Yuan Chang Leong 🇺🇸
Social psychology and social neuroscience
University of Chicago, United States

Fang Cui 🇨🇳
Experimental psychology
Shenzhen University, China

Rhea Arini 🇬🇧
Developmental psychology
University of Lincoln, United Kingdom
 

Social Cognitive Neuroscience Lab
5848 S. University Avenue

Chicago, IL 60637