Cristiano Castelfranchi

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Cristiano Castelfranchi (born 1944 in Rome) is a senior research scientist at the Institute of Psychology of the Italian National Research Council. He teaches Cognitive Psychology and Artificial Intelligence at the University of Siena.[1] In 2003, he was made a fellow at the European Coordinating Committee for Artificial Intelligence for pioneering work in Artificial Intelligence.[2]

His research topic include:

  • autonomy and goal-oriented behavior, with an emphasis on anticipatory action-control
  • cognitive agent theory and architecture, with special focus on goals and their dynamics
  • cognitive foundations of social phenomena (trust, power, cooperation, norms, institutions, etc.)
  • cognitive approach to communication (semantics and pragmatics)
  • social cognition and emotions, with an emphasis on the cognitive anatomy of complex emotional states
  • multi-agent systems and social simulation, integrating cognitive, social and computer science

Selected Works

Books

  • Trust Theory: A Socio-Cognitive and Computational Model (with Rino Falcone). 2010.
  • Cognitive and social action (with Rosaria Conte). 1995. London University College of London Press.
  • Artificial Social Systems (with Eric Werner). 1994. Springer Verlag.

References

External links


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