Saturday 16 November 2024
We study cognition and communication as they occur within interconnected, multiscale, complex systems — brains, bodies, small groups, and large sociocultural systems. Our tools are many: behavioral experiments, in the lab and online; observation and analysis of real-world behavior; neuroscience methods like EEG; historical case studies; and computational modeling. A major focus is investigating how thought and behavior can get stuck in stable patterns ('regimes') but also change suddenly ('ruptures'). Examples include "aha!" moments in mathematics, paradigm shifts in science, romantic breakups, cultural revolutions, creative breakthroughs in the arts, and improvisation by musicians.
In other words, we study the lulls and leaps of human imagination.