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matan rubin

Comparing the value of perceived humanversus AI-generated empathy

16 July, 2025

new paper published in Nature Human Behaviour by Matan Rubin, Prof. Anat Perry, and colleagues, explores whether empathic responses are perceived differently when attributed to a human versus artificial intelligence.

Across nine studies with over 6,000 participants, the researchers found that identically generated empathic messages were rated as more empathic, supportive, and authentic when thought to come from a human.

oded leshem

Congratulation to Dr. Oded Adomi Leshem

2 July, 2025

Who won ISPP’s 2025 David O. Sears Best Book Award for his book "Hope Amidst Conflict: Philosophical and Psychological Explorations," Published by Oxford University Press.

Leshem is a senior researcher at the PICR lab and the founder of the new International Hub for Hope Research.

David O. Sears Best Book on Mass Politics Award

Amir Tal

Welcome Dr. Amir Tal

24 June, 2025

The Department of Psychology is excited to welcome Dr. Amir Tal, a new faculty member joining the department in collaboration with the Department of Cognitive Science and the Brain. Amir will join us in the upcoming academic year (2025–2026) and will lead the Computational Psychology cluster.

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The potential of eye-tracking for memory detection

18 October, 2022
The potential of eye-tracking for memory detection

Attempts of people to conceal what they know are quite common, as in court, neuropsychological assessments or interpersonal relationships. These attempts sometimes carry significant consequences as in incriminations of criminals and thwarting terror attacks. Thus, there is a need for empirical, theory-driven tools that will allow for the detection of concealed memories and avoid false accusations. In a recent paper, published in Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Oryah Lancry-Dayan, Prof. Yoni Pertzov and Prof. Gershon Ben-Shakhar review the latest advances in the field and highlight the potential of eye-tracking for memory detection. In contrast to previous methods, which include physiological responses and EEG, tracking gaze behavior enables researchers to use more complex paradigms that include displays of several objects simultaneously. These paradigms allow for harnessing different cognitive processes (e.g., encoding, retrieval and change detection) for classifying what is familiar to the observer and what is not.

See full article here