Amos N. Tversky Collegiate Professor of Psychology and Statistics
About
I received my PhD in 1990 from Stanford University in Psychology. I worked with Phoebe Ellsworth studying psychology and law and with Amos Tversky studying mathematical modeling and judgment and decision making.
I spent seven years at the University of Washington’s Psychology department, a sabbatical year at Princeton University, and have been at the University of Michigan’s Psychology department since 1997. I also have joint appointments in Statistics and Marketing. I’m a Research Professor at the Research Center for Group Dynamics as well as the Center for Human Growth and Development. I am a Faculty Associate of the UM Comprehensive Cancer Clinic and the Center for Computational Medicine and Bioinformatics. I co-founded and co-directed with Panos Papalambros the Design Science Program at the University of Michigan. I am currently director of the Biosocial Methods Collaborative at the Institute of Social Research.
My research interests are in judgment and decision making broadly defined. I study both normative and descriptive decision making using a variety of techniques including mathematical modeling, surveys, field observations, and experimental lab studies. I've recently extended my decision making research to applied settings in product design and medical decision making. I also do research in applied statistics, which can be construed as a form of decision making.