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Research Interests

Hi,

 

After completing my PhD at the University of Toulouse under the supervision of Jean-François Bonnefon (DR. CNRS) and Wim De Neys (DR. CNRS), I moved to the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières (UQTR), Canada, under the supervision of Pr. Isabelle Blanchette. I was next appointed associate professor at the Université de Nîmes (UNIMES), France. I recently joined the CLLE lab (UMR 5263, CNRS) at the University of Toulouse.

 

I see myself as an experimental psychologist, at the border between cognitive and social psychology. Broadly speaking, my research focuses on human rationality. In particular, it explores how human beings reason, make decisions or judge in a complex world imbued with uncertainty, where preferences and emotions are intimately present; finally, it means situations which do not favor optimal reasoning, decision or judgment. We  label this research as the exploration of human rationality in complex situations. This research leads me to investigate different moderators of reasoning, judgment, and decision (e.g., emotions; situations that impede rational reasoning, interindividual differences), as well as to explore different explanations, including evolutionary arguments.

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My research received financial support from the French national research agency. The supported research focuses on the way people solve the cognitive conflict triggered at the time of judging accidental harms.

 

 

 

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