Jean Decety

Jean Decety

Jean Decety is a leading scholar on the cognitive neuroscience of moral reasoning, social decision-making, empathy, justice motivation and prosocial behavior, as well as other topics related to how we feel, think and behave in social situations.

His work has led to new understandings of the socioemotional and neurobiological mechanisms underlying social cognition in children and adults, as well as forensic psychopaths. Decety’s research uses a multi-level analysis and interdisciplinary approach, including functional neuroimaging, psychology, and behavioral economics. He believes that to encourage human cooperation on a global level, naturally emerging prosocial values, which are further cultivated by parents and social institutions, are best balanced with a healthy dose of reasoning.

Jean Decety is a member of the Committee on Neurobiology. He is the co-founder of the Society for Social Neuroscience. He is the director of the Social Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory and the Child Neurosuite at the University of Chicago.

Decety Stories

Matthew 22:39

Study led by Prof. Jean Decety finds children from religious households are less likely to be altruistic than those from nonreligious ones


Clue to infant moral compass

Study by Prof. Jean Decety finds infants can distinguish between prosocial and antisocial behavior


Telegraph (India)

How Children Get the Christmas Spirit

Article discusses research by Prof. Jean Decety, who found that moral decision-making in children is informed by emotion, reason


Science Explains Why Kids Are Terrible At Sharing

Article discusses research by Prof. Jean Decety, who found that children's moral decision-making is informed by emotion, reason


Science Explains Why Kids Are Terrible At Sharing

Article discusses research by Prof. Jean Decety, who found that moral decision-making in children is informed by both emotion and reason


Brain scans link concern for justice with reason, not emotion

Prof. Jean Decety leads study showing people with high 'justice sensitivity' are more cognitively than emotionally driven


Science Daily

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