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Nori Jacoby

Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology

Person with curly hair in a blue collared shirt indoors near large windows.

Nori Jacoby is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at Cornell University. His research focuses on the internal representations that support and shape our sensory and cognitive abilities, and on how those representations are themselves determined by both nature and nurture. He addresses these classic issues with new tools, both by applying machine learning techniques to behavioral experiments, and by expanding the scale and scope of experimental research via massive online experiments and fieldwork in locations around the globe.

Nori completed his Ph.D. at the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences (ELSC) at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem under the supervision of Naftali Tishby and Merav Ahissar, followed by postdoctoral positions at Josh McDermott's Computational Audition Lab at MIT, at Tom Griffiths's Computational Cognitive Science Lab at UC Berkeley, and as a Presidential Scholar in Society and Neuroscience at Columbia University.

Before coming to Cornell Nori was a Research Group Leader at the Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics in Frankfurt.