Principal Investigators

AI Researchers

Pierre Baldi

UC Irvine

Matthew (Matt) Botvinick

Google DeepMind
Yale University

Vincent (Vince) Conitzer

Carnegie Mellon University

Mor Geva

Tel Aviv University

Michael (Mike) Mozer

Google DeepMind
University of
Colorado Boulder

Sagi Perel

Google DeepMind

Paul Riechers

Astera Institute

Fernando Rosas

University of Sussex

Cynthia Rudin

Duke University

Stuart Russell

UC Berkeley

Adam Shai

Astera Institute

Kyongsik (KS) Yun

NASA Jet Propulsion Lab
Caltech

Neuroscientists, Biologists,
and Psychologists

Uri Maoz
(Project Leader)

Chapman University
UCLA
Caltech

Thomas (Tom) Clandinin

Stanford University

Jennifer (Jen) Collinger

University of Pittsburgh

Robert (Rob) Gaunt

University of Pittsburgh

Michael Graziano

Princeton University

Patrick Haggard

University College London

Hillard (Hilly) Kaplan

Chapman University

Gabriel Kreiman

Harvard University

Michael Levin

Tufts University

Liad Mudrik

Tel Aviv University

William (Bill) Newsome

Stanford University

Philosophers

Colin Allen

UC Santa Barbara

Michael Bratman

Stanford University

Rosa Cao

Stanford University

Colin Doyle

Loyola Marymount University

Thomas Icard

Stanford University

Ketan Ramakrishnan

Yale University

Adina Roskies

UC Santa Barbara

Lauren Ross

UC Irvine

Michael Serota

Loyola Marymount University

Scott Shapiro

Yale University

Gideon Yaffe

Yale University

Early-Career Collaborators

Dimitri Bredikhin

Chapman University

Dimitri’s research investigates the mechanisms linking neural dynamics to perceptual decisions and conscious access, offering a biologically grounded computational account of perception that may inform AI research and development.

✉️ dbredikhin@chapman.edu

Shaozhe Cheng

UCLA & Duke University

Shaozhe is interested in the distinctive nature and origins of the human mind and intelligence, focusing on the social, cognitive, developmental, and computational foundations of uniquely human agentic structures and their significance in social coordination, with the goal of advancing more human-like and human-compatible AI systems.

🔗 Website

Alejandro de Miguel

Chapman University

Alejandro develops machine learning methods for asynchronous brain–computer interfaces to decode intentions and predict voluntary movement.

✉️ demiguelgmez@chapman.edu

Tomáš Dominik

Chapman University

Tomáš uses techniques from psychology and neuroscience to study intentions, volition, and consciousness in humans and AI systems.

✉️ tomasdominik01@gmail.com

Daniel Friedman

Purdue University

Daniel works on questions about the nature and norms governing shared inquiry.

🔗 Website

Lee Hristienko

UC Santa Barbara

Lee is interested in artificial moral agents, what they could and ought to be like, and how moral theory contributes to these questions.

✉️ hristienko@ucsb.edu

Lucas Jeay-Bizot

Chapman University

Lucas’ research interests lie in the neuroscience of volition, with a focus on how and when intentions and self-initiated decisions are formed in the brain.

✉️ jeaybizot@chapman.edu

Stipe Pandžić

University of Milan

Stipe’s research focuses on logical systems for AI and uncertain reasoning, with an interest in formalizing intention formation and intention detection.

🔗 Website

Ben Perry

Chapman University

Ben studies how top-down processes shape our experience.

🔗 Website

Paulius Rimkevičius

Vilnius University

Paulius’ area of specialisation is philosophy of cognitive science, including philosophy of artificial intelligence, and especially questions related to self-knowledge and free will.

✉️ paulius.rimkevicius@fsf.vu.lt

Paul Talma

UCLA

Paul investigates the structure of action representations in natural and artificial agents.

✉️ paultalma@ucla.edu

Iwan Williams

Center for Philosophy of Artificial Intelligence (CPAI), University of Copenhagen

Iwan is a philosopher of mind and artificial intelligence, focusing on the representational capacities of large language models.

🔗 Website

Where we come from