Vincenzo Crupi is professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science, vice-president of the European Philosophy of Science Association, member of the Academia Europaea, President of the Turin School of Honors “Ferdinando Rossi”, and former Director of the Center for Logic, Language, and Cognition at the University of Turin (2014-2021). His work on classical issues in logic and philosophy of science concerns Bayesian epistemology, confirmation, and conditionals. In cognitive science, he’s been involved in experimental research on human reasoning and in theoretical models of information search. As a major domain of application, he has been working extensively on rationality and error in clinical medicine and medical decision making.
Katya Tentori is professor of General Psychology at the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC), the Center for Medical Sciences (CISMED), and the Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science (DiPSCo) at the University of Trento. Her research interests include: inductive and probabilistic reasoning; causal cognition; information search; decision making; applied reasoning and decision making (e.g., legal reasoning, medical decision making, environmental sustainability).
Gustavo Cevolani is Associate Professor of Logic and Philosophy of Science at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca. His main research interests are in general philosophy of science, formal epistemology, and cognitive science, focusing on rational decisions and the analysis of scientific and ordinary reasoning.
Giuliano Rosella is a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Logic, Language, and Cognition (LLC) at the University of Turin, Italy. Prior to his current position, he earned his PhD in Philosophy from the same university as part of the FINO Consortium. He also holds a Master's degree in logic from the ILLC at the University of Amsterdam. His research interests lie in the fields of Logic and Philosophical Logic. He is currently exploring the potential application of algebraic logic techniques and uncertainty theories to the study of conditional and hypothetical reasoning.
Alessandro Bogani is a postdoctoral researcher at the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences at the University of Trento. He holds a master's degree in Psychology and a Ph.D. in Cognitive and Brain Sciences. His current research revolves around counterfactual thinking, with a particular emphasis on exploring the psychological functions underlying this form of mental simulation and its influence on judgments and future behaviors.
Davide Coraci is a Research Collaborator at the IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca. His research interests lie at the intersection of philosophy of science and cognitive neuroscience, encompassing Bayesian epistemology, concept representations, and methodological issues in neuroimaging methods.
I teach Logic at the University of Turin, Department of Philosophy and Education. My main research interests are in logic and philosophy of language. I'm Director of the Center for Logic, Language, and Cognition (llc.unito.it), Associate Editor of Analysis, and editorial panel member of Thought.
Stefania Pighin is an Associate Professor of General Psychology at the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (CIMeC) and the Department of Psychology and Cognitive Science (DiPSCo) at the University of Trento. Her academic and research interests explore both foundational and applied aspects of human cognition, with a specific focus on judgment and decision-making, probabilistic reasoning, and counterfactual thinking.