Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, 2018.Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.Includes bibliographical references (pages 199-211).This thesis develops formal computational cognitive models of the social intelligence underlying human cooperation and morality. Human social intelligence is uniquely powerful. We collaborate with others to accomplish together what none of us could do on our own; we share the benefits of collaboration fairly and trust others to do the same. Even young children work and play collaboratively, guided by normative principles, and with a sophistication unparalleled in other animal species. Here, I seek to understand these everyday feats of social intellige...
Accurately inferring the moral character of others is crucial for avoiding social threats. Putativel...
Theory of mind refers to the human ability to reason about mental content of other people such as be...
In this article, we discuss the evolution of human intelligence from a standpoint of comparative cog...
This thesis consists of three empirical chapters that investigate elements of human social behavior,...
We introduce a computational framework for understanding the structure and dynamics of moral learnin...
Cooperation is the hallmark human trait which has allowed us to congregate into the vast, continent-...
The overarching goal of this thesis was to examine the behavioral, computational, and neural mechani...
Many of the computational problems people face are difficult to solve under the limited time and cog...
Abstract If artificial intelligence (AI) were achievable, what would the conse-quences be for human ...
This paper urges that if we wish to give social intelligence to our agents, it pays to look at how w...
The expansion of web-enabled social interaction has shed light on social aspects of intelligence tha...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comp...
Abstract This article takes off from Johan van Benthem’s ruminations on the interface between logic ...
The ability to decipher the intentions of other agents and to mentalize how one’s own choice might i...
This is the data & code accompanying the manuscript:Van Baar, J., Chang, L., & Sanfey, A.G. (in pres...
Accurately inferring the moral character of others is crucial for avoiding social threats. Putativel...
Theory of mind refers to the human ability to reason about mental content of other people such as be...
In this article, we discuss the evolution of human intelligence from a standpoint of comparative cog...
This thesis consists of three empirical chapters that investigate elements of human social behavior,...
We introduce a computational framework for understanding the structure and dynamics of moral learnin...
Cooperation is the hallmark human trait which has allowed us to congregate into the vast, continent-...
The overarching goal of this thesis was to examine the behavioral, computational, and neural mechani...
Many of the computational problems people face are difficult to solve under the limited time and cog...
Abstract If artificial intelligence (AI) were achievable, what would the conse-quences be for human ...
This paper urges that if we wish to give social intelligence to our agents, it pays to look at how w...
The expansion of web-enabled social interaction has shed light on social aspects of intelligence tha...
Thesis: Ph. D., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Department of Electrical Engineering and Comp...
Abstract This article takes off from Johan van Benthem’s ruminations on the interface between logic ...
The ability to decipher the intentions of other agents and to mentalize how one’s own choice might i...
This is the data & code accompanying the manuscript:Van Baar, J., Chang, L., & Sanfey, A.G. (in pres...
Accurately inferring the moral character of others is crucial for avoiding social threats. Putativel...
Theory of mind refers to the human ability to reason about mental content of other people such as be...
In this article, we discuss the evolution of human intelligence from a standpoint of comparative cog...