
Adam Waytz
· Morris and Alice Kaplan Chair in Ethics and Decision Management; Professor of Management & Organizations; Professor of Psychology, Weinberg College of Arts & Sciences (Courtesy)VerifiedNorthwestern University · Management & Organizations
Active 2007–2026
About
Adam Waytz is the Morris and Alice Kaplan Chair in Ethics and Decision Management and a professor of Management and Organizations at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University. His research employs methods from social psychology and cognitive neuroscience to study how people think about other minds, focusing on processes related to ethics, intergroup processes, and the psychological consequences of technology. His work has been published in leading journals such as Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Psychological Review. Recognized for his contributions, Professor Waytz has received awards including the 2008 and 2013 Theoretical Innovation Award from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, the SAGE Foundation Young Scholar Award, and the International Social Cognition Network's Early Career Award. He has also served as a visiting scholar at the Russell Sage Foundation. His academic background includes a BA in Psychology from Columbia University, a PhD in social psychology from the University of Chicago, and a post-doctoral fellowship at Harvard University supported by a National Service Research Award. His research interests encompass ethics and morality, mind perception, dehumanization, social connection, meaning-making, social influence, and human-technology interaction.
Research signals
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Research topics
- Computer Science
- Political Science
- Psychology
- Law
- Social psychology
- Data science
- Epistemology
- Engineering
- Philosophy
- Geography
- Cognitive science
- Neuroscience
- Ecology
- Cognitive psychology
- Linguistics
Selected publications
Theory of Mind and Self-Attributions of Mentality are Dissociable in LLMs
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2026-03-30
preprintOpen accessSafety fine-tuning in Large Language Models (LLMs) seeks to suppress potentially harmful forms of mind-attribution such as models asserting their own consciousness or claiming to experience emotions. We investigate whether suppressing mind-attribution tendencies degrades intimately related socio-cognitive abilities such as Theory of Mind (ToM). Through safety ablation and mechanistic analyses of representational similarity, we demonstrate that LLM attributions of mind to themselves and to technological artefacts are behaviorally and mechanistically dissociable from ToM capabilities. Nevertheless, safety fine-tuned models under-attribute mind to non-human animals relative to human baselines and are less likely to exhibit spiritual belief, suppressing widely shared perspectives regarding the distribution and nature of non-human minds.
Theory of Mind and Self-Attributions of Mentality are Dissociable in LLMs
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2026-03-30
articleOpen accessSafety fine-tuning in Large Language Models (LLMs) seeks to suppress potentially harmful forms of mind-attribution such as models asserting their own consciousness or claiming to experience emotions. We investigate whether suppressing mind-attribution tendencies degrades intimately related socio-cognitive abilities such as Theory of Mind (ToM). Through safety ablation and mechanistic analyses of representational similarity, we demonstrate that LLM attributions of mind to themselves and to technological artefacts are behaviorally and mechanistically dissociable from ToM capabilities. Nevertheless, safety fine-tuned models under-attribute mind to non-human animals relative to human baselines and are less likely to exhibit spiritual belief, suppressing widely shared perspectives regarding the distribution and nature of non-human minds.
Holding Robots Responsible: The Elements of Machine Morality
UNC Libraries · 2025-07-29
articleOpen accessPoets Over Quants: Automation and AI Threats Increase the Value People Place on Creativity
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin · 2025-05-19 · 7 citations
articleWe examine how perceived automation and AI threats (the belief that advanced technology threatens humans’ career prospects) shape workers’ strategies for career preparation. In nine studies ( N = 2,320; three preregistered), we find that perceived automation threat drives people to prioritize creative skills over technical and social skills. A pilot study revealed that people view creativity as less prone to automation and more likely to complement automation. Subsequent experiments confirmed that automation threat leads people to highlight creativity in job applications (Studies 1a–1c), leads STEM students and professional graphic designers to cultivate creative abilities (Studies 2a–2b), and increases jobseekers’ interest in companies that champion creativity (Study 3). People value creative skills in response to the automation threat even when reminded of generative AI’s ability for creativity (Studies 4a–4b). These results suggest that advanced technology steers individuals to prioritize creativity as a skill necessary to compete in the labor market.
The Psychology of Robots and Artificial Intelligence
2025-05-01 · 7 citations
book-chapterSenior authorNot many of us will try to marry a robot, but everyone interacts with machines. How does the human mind react to the rise of machines? This chapter will explore the psychology of the machines and technology transforming our modern world—especially robots and artificial intelligence.
Same Data, Diverging Perspectives: The Power of Visualizations to Elicit Competing Interpretations
arXiv (Cornell University) · 2024-01-17 · 1 citations
preprintOpen accessPeople routinely rely on data to make decisions, but the process can be riddled with biases. We show that patterns in data might be noticed first or more strongly, depending on how the data is visually represented or what the viewer finds salient. We also demonstrate that viewer interpretation of data is similar to that of 'ambiguous figures' such that two people looking at the same data can come to different decisions. In our studies, participants read visualizations depicting competitions between two entities, where one has a historical lead (A) but the other has been gaining momentum (B) and predicted a winner, across two chart types and three annotation approaches. They either saw the historical lead as salient and predicted that A would win, or saw the increasing momentum as salient and predicted B to win. These results suggest that decisions can be influenced by both how data are presented and what patterns people find visually salient.
Same Data, Diverging Perspectives: The Power of Visualizations to Elicit Competing Interpretations
IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics · 2024-04-15 · 17 citations
articleOpen accessPeople routinely rely on data to make decisions, but the process can be riddled with biases. We show that patterns in data might be noticed first or more strongly, depending on how the data is visually represented or what the viewer finds salient. We also demonstrate that viewer interpretation of data is similar to that of 'ambiguous figures' such that two people looking at the same data can come to different decisions. In our studies, participants read visualizations depicting competitions between two entities, where one has a historical lead (A) but the other has been gaining momentum (B) and predicted a winner, across two chart types and three annotation approaches. They either saw the historical lead as salient and predicted that A would win, or saw the increasing momentum as salient and predicted B to win. These results suggest that decisions can be influenced by both how data are presented and what patterns people find visually salient.
Scientific Reports · 2024-05-25 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessSenior authorAnthropogenic climate change poses an existential threat to life on Earth, hastening the need to generate support for sustainability policies. Four preregistered studies (total N = 2524) tested whether informing United States citizens about the successful implementation of sustainability policies abroad increased support for similar domestic policies. Studies 1 and 2 found that learning about the successful implementation of sustainability policies (reducing automobile use, using wind energy) abroad increased (1) support for similar domestic policies, (2) intentions to modify behavior to facilitate the adoption of sustainability policies, and (3) behavioral support for sustainability policies. Study 3 found that learning about sustainability policies in both WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic) (France) and non-WEIRD (Colombia) countries increased support for similar domestic policies. Study 4 found that learning about sustainability policies abroad increased support for domestic policy proposals that would impact participants' city of residence. Overall, these findings suggest that educating citizens about the implementation of sustainability policies abroad can bolster support for domestic policies that combat climate change.
Advantaged groups misperceive how allyship will be received
Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes · 2024-02-03 · 17 citations
articleSenior authorThoughts on the Surprising Effect of Priming on 22-Item Sino-Nasal Outcome Test (SNOT-22) Results
American Journal of Rhinology and Allergy · 2024-03-20 · 1 citations
letterOpen access
Recent grants
NIH · $43k · 2011
Frequent coauthors
- 40 shared
Liane Young
- 23 shared
Nicholas Epley
University of Chicago
- 14 shared
Nour Kteily
- 13 shared
Emile Bruneau
- 12 shared
Kurt Gray
- 12 shared
Juliana Schroeder
University of California, Berkeley
- 11 shared
Sarah Cotterill
- 10 shared
James Dungan
University of Chicago
Education
- 2012
Ph.D., Social Psychology
University of California, Berkeley
- 2009
M.A., Social Psychology
University of California, Berkeley
- 2007
B.A., Psychology
University of California, Los Angeles
Awards & honors
- Theoretical Innovation Award from the Society for Personalit…
- SAGE Foundation Young Scholar Award
- International Social Cognition Network's Early Career Award
- Chair's Core Course Teaching Award, Kellogg School of Manage…
- Sidney J Levy Teaching Award, Kellogg School of Management
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