Cristina Bicchieri

Cristina Bicchieri
Born Milano
Nationality American and Italian
Era 20th / 21st-century philosophy
Region Western philosophy
Main interests
Philosophy of social science, rational choice and game theory

Cristina Bicchieri is the S.J.P. Harvie Professor of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics in the Philosophy and Psychology Departments at the University of Pennsylvania, and director of the Philosophy, Politics and Economics program.[1] She is also a Professor in the Legal Studies department of the Wharton School. She has worked on problems in the philosophy of social science, rational choice and game theory.[1] More recently, her work has focused on the nature and evolution of social norms, and the design of behavioral experiments to test under which conditions norms will be followed.[1] She is a leader in the field of behavioral ethics and is the director of the Behavioral Ethics Lab (BeLab) at the University of Pennsylvania.[2]

Biography

Bicchieri was born in Milano, Italy. She received her Laurea in Philosophy, summa cum laude, from the University of Milan in 1974, and her PhD in Philosophy of Science at Cambridge University in 1984.[1] Before moving to the University of Pennsylvania she taught in the program of Philosophy and Economics at Barnard College, Columbia University, in the Philosophy department at Notre Dame University and in the departments of Philosophy and Social and Decision Sciences at Carnegie Mellon University.[3]

She is also a member of the advisory board at the School of Government at LUISS University of Rome, where she occasionally teaches.[4]

Bicchieri has served as a consultant to UNICEF since 2008, and she has advised various NGOs and other international organizations on social norms and how to deal with them when combating negative social practices.[5] Her work on social norms has been adopted by UNICEF in its campaigns to eliminate practices that violate human rights.[6]

She was knighted Cavaliere Ordine al Merito della Republica Italiana in 2007.[7]

Research

Bicchieri is especially known for her work regarding the epistemic foundations of game theory and social norms.[1] Her recent experimental work is a major contribution to behavioral ethics,[2] as it shows how different kind of expectations influence pro-social behavior. The Behavioral Ethics Lab which she leads specializes in the study of social norms, moral heuristics, biases, resource division, cheating, corruption, measures of autonomy and their relation to social change.[2]

Social norms

Bicchieri has developed a new theory of social norms that challenges several of the fundamental methodological assumptions of the social sciences.[8] She argues that the stress social scientists place upon rational deliberation obscures the fact that many successful choices occur even though the individuals make their choices without much deliberation. She explores in depth the more automatic components of coordination and proposes a heuristic account of coordination that complements the more traditional deliberational account.[9] According to her heuristic account, individuals conform with a social norm as an automatic response to cues in their situation that focus their attention on this particular norm. A social norm is analyzed as a rule for choosing in a mixed-motive game, such as the prisoner's dilemma, that members of a population prefer to follow on condition that they expect sufficiently many in the population to follow the rule. Bicchieri applies this account of social norms and heuristic selection of norms to a number of important problems in the social sciences, including bargaining, the prisoners' dilemma and suboptimal norms based upon pluralistic ignorance.[9]

Her most recent research is experimental, showing how normative and empirical expectations support norm compliance, and how manipulating such expectations can radically change behavior.[10] Her experimental results show that most subjects have a conditional preference for following pro-social norms.[11] Manipulating their expectations causes major behavioral changes (i.e., from fair to unfair choices, from cooperation to defection). She asserts that there are no such things as stable dispositions or unconditional preferences (to be fair, reciprocate, cooperate, and so on). She similarly concludes that policymakers who want to induce pro-social behavior have to work on changing people's expectations about how others behave and how others think one should behave in similar situations (i.e. people's empirical and normative expectations). These results have major consequences for our understanding of moral behavior and the construction of better normative theories, grounded on what people can in fact do.[12]

Epistemic foundations of game theory

Bicchieri pioneered work on counterfactuals and belief-revision in games, and the consequences of relaxing the common knowledge assumption.[13] Her contributions include axiomatic models of players' theory of the game and the proof that—in a large class of games—a player's theory of the game is consistent only if the player's knowledge is limited.[14] An important consequence of assuming bounded knowledge is that it allows for more intuitive solutions to familiar games such as the finitely repeated prisoner's dilemma or the chain-store paradox. Bicchieri has also devised mechanical procedures (algorithms) that allow players to compute solutions for games of perfect and imperfect information. Devising such procedures is particularly important for Artificial Intelligence applications, since interacting software agents have to be programmed to play a variety of 'games'.[15]

Books

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Cristina Bicchieri". http://philosophy.sas.upenn.edu/. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 25 November 2013. External link in |work= (help)
  2. 1 2 3 "BeLab". BeLab.org. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  3. "Cristina Bicchieri". http://sog.luiss.it/. Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali. Retrieved 25 November 2013. External link in |work= (help)
  4. "Advisory Board". http://sog.luiss.it/. Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali "Guido Carli". Retrieved 25 November 2013. External link in |work= (help)
  5. "The Philosopher Queen of UNICEF". Penn Gazette. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  6. "Changing Norms to Change Lives" (PDF). www.sas.upenn.edu. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 26 November 2013.
  7. "CRISTINA BICCHIERI RECEIVES ITALIAN KNIGHTHOOD". www.sas.upenn.edu. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 25 November 2013.
  8. Guala, Francesco (2007). "Review: The Grammar of Society: The Nature and Dynamics of Social Norms" (PDF). The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science. 58 (3): 613–618. doi:10.1093/bjps/axm022.
  9. 1 2 C. Bicchieri,The Grammar of Society: The Nature and Dynamics of Social Norms (Cambridge University Press, 2006))
  10. Bicchieri, C.; Chavez, A. (2013). "Norm manipulation, norm evasion: Experimental evidence". Economics and Philosophy. 29 (2): 175–198. doi:10.1017/s0266267113000187.
  11. Bicchieri, C. (2010). "Norms, preferences, and conditional behavior". Politics, Philosophy, and Economics. 9 (3): 297–313. doi:10.1177/1470594x10369276.
  12. C. Bicchieri and A. Chavez (2010), Behaving as Expected: Public Information and Fairness Norms, Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 23(2): 161-178.
  13. Bicchieri, C. (1993). "Counterfactuals, belief changes, and equilibrium refinements". Philosophical Topics. 21 (1): 21–52. doi:10.5840/philtopics19932112.
  14. C. Bicchieri, Rationality and Coordination (Cambridge University Press 2003).
  15. C. Bicchieri and A. Antonelli (1995), Game-theoretic Axioms for Local Rationality and Bounded Knowledge, Journal of Logic, Language and Information4

External links

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