Resume-aware faculty matching

Find professors who actually fit you

Upload your resume. Four AI agents analyze your background, rank the faculty who fit, inspect their recent research, and help you draft outreach — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

Free to startNo credit cardCancel anytime
Top matches Balanced preset
Dr. Sarah Chen
Stanford · Interpretability · NLP
91
Dr. Marcus Holloway
MIT · Robotics · RL
84
Dr. Aisha Okonkwo
CMU · Fairness · HCI
82
Nova · Professor Researcher · re-ranking top 20…
Doug Medin

Doug Medin

· Professor Emeritus, Education...Verified

Northwestern University · Social Policy Analysis and Evaluation

Active 1965–2023

h-index85
Citations36.2k
Papers3336 last 5y
Funding$5.2M
See your match with Doug Medin — sign in to PhdFit.Sign in

Research topics

  • Social Science
  • Computer Science
  • Sociology
  • Philosophy
  • Anthropology
  • Epistemology
  • Environmental ethics
  • Cognitive science
  • Psychology

Selected publications

  • Cognition Beyond the Human: Cognitive Psychology and the New Animism

    Ethos · 2020 · 26 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Sociology
    • Social Science
    • Epistemology

    Abstract We present a new account of the cognitive commitments at stake in animist epistemologies. We use field‐based cognitive experiments to contribute to anthropological theories of the new animism, focusing on concepts of nonhuman agency afforded on one animist framework, that of the Ngöbe of Panama. Results from multiple studies using converging methods indicate that Ngöbe individuals have access to an ecocentric conceptual framework within which agency is inferred on the basis of interactions and relationships (what we term “folkcommunication”). This account represents an alternative to what has often been assumed (by both psychologists and anthropologists) to be a universal conceptual framework of anthropocentric folkpsychology where agency is inferred on the basis of mental states. Further experiments show that the Ngöbe framework supports sophisticated inferences about ecological behavior and that conceptual models exhibit important within‐culture variability. Intervening in debates about the nature of animism, we contend that a satisfying theory must account for the productive dimension of animist frameworks and be equipped to discriminate between anthropomorphic and ecocentric conceptual reasoning. Folkcommunication does so by accounting for the cognitive foundations of animism in terms of an ecologically centered perspective—offering a fresh point of departure for understanding Indigenous animisms.

Recent grants

Frequent coauthors

Similar researchers at Northwestern University

  • Resume-aware match score
  • Save to shortlist
  • AI-drafted outreach

See your match with Doug Medin

PhdFit ranks faculty by your research interests, methods, and publications — grounded in their actual work, not templates.

  • Free to start
  • No credit card
  • 30-second signup