Boaz Keysar

Boaz Keysar

Boaz Keysar conducts research about how people communicate, negotiate and make decisions. His research interests include communication and language use; metaphors, idioms and other figures of speech; thinking, reasoning and problem solving; and judgment and decision making. Many of his discoveries reveal systematic reasons for miscommunication and misunderstandings. For example, his research shows that people overestimate their ability to communicate accurately, and counter to what people tend to think, we miscommunicate even more with those who are more familiar to us.

Prof. Keysar publishes his work in leading journals such as Psychological Science and Psychological Review, and his honors and awards include a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship, major federal research grants from National Institute of Health, National Science Foundation and a Fulbright Scholarship. He is also lab director of The Multilingualism and Decision-Making Lab at UChicago. 

Keysar Stories

Communicating in a foreign language takes emotion out of decision-making

Prof. Boaz Keysar explains how using foreign languages affects decisions


Science Daily

The Superior Social Skills of Bilinguals

UChicago study finds that multilingual children are often better communicators


How the Language You Speak Affects The Way You Think

Prof. Boaz Keysar, doctoral student Sayuri Hayakawa discuss how thinking in a foreign language may make us think more logically


Jewish Press

Your Morals Depend On Language

Audio: Prof. Boaz Keysar describes his research finding that people think more rationally about problems posed in a foreign language


Our Moral Tongue

Prof. Boaz Keysar describes his research finding that people think more rationally about problems posed in a foreign language


Gained in translation

Prof. Boaz Keysar discusses his research finding that people think more rationally about problems posed in a foreign language


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