Kurt Gray
Kurt is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. His Mind Perception and Morality lab investigates moral judgments and how people perceive the minds of others.
To visit his lab's website, click here.
To visit his lab's website, click here.
Valentine Hacquard
Valentine is an Assistant Professor of Linguistics at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her work focuses on semantics and its interfaces with syntax and pragmatics. In particular: (1) modality, tense, and aspect; (2) comparatives; and (3) attitude verbs.
To visit her personal website, click here.
To visit her personal website, click here.
Brian Hare
Brian is an Associate Professor of Evolutionary Anthropology at Duke University. He leads the Hominoid Psychology Research Group, which compares the psychology of hominoids (human and non-human apes). He also studies the cognition of domestic dogs and other canids at the Duke Canine Cognition Center.
To visit his primary research group's website, click here.
To visit his primary research group's website, click here.
Kristen Lindquist
Kristen is an Assistant Professor in Social Psychology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and director of the Carolina Affective Science Lab (CASL). Her research uses social cognitive methods, psycho-physiology and neuroimaging to ask questions about the basis of human emotion.
To visit her personal website, click here.
To visit her personal website, click here.
Robert Lurz
Robert is a Professor of Philosophy at Brooklyn College, CUNY. In his recent book Mindreading Animals: The Debate over What Animals Know about Other Minds (2011), Robert offers a fresh approach to the hotly debated question of mental-state attribution in nonhuman animals.
To visit his personal website, click here.
To visit his personal website, click here.
Shaun Nichols
Shaun is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. His research focuses on the psychological underpinnings of ordinary thinking about philosophical issues. Recently, he's been applying this method to issues surrounding free will, the self, consciousness, and causation.
To visit his personal website, click here.
To visit his personal website, click here.
Philip Robbins
Philip is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Missouri. His research focuses upon mind perception and moral psychology. He also directs the MU Experimental Philosophy Lab.
To visit his lab's website, click here.
To visit his lab's website, click here.
Andrea Scarantino
Andrea is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Georgia State University. He works primarily in philosophy of mind. He is also an associate member of the newly formed Neuroscience Institute (NI), and an elected member of the Interdisciplinary Committee of the NI. My current research focuses on emotion, information, and philosophical methodology.
To visit his personal website, click here.
To visit his personal website, click here.