Caroline Charpentier

Caroline Charpentier

Assistant Professor

Caroline Charpentier is an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology and the Brain and Behavior Institute. She obtained her PhD in cognitive neuroscience at University College London, UK, in 2016, with her dissertation focusing on the interaction between emotions and decision-making. She then completed her postdoctoral training at the California Institute of Technology, studying the behavioral, neural, and computational mechanisms of social learning and decision-making. Her research is interdisciplinary, drawing from social neuroscience, behavioral economics and computational psychiatry. Dr Charpentier’s research has received funding from the Wellcome Trust (Sir Henry Wellcome Postdoctoral Fellowship) and is currently supported by a K99/R00 Pathway to Independence award from NIMH (2021-2026), investigating the neuro-computational mechanisms of social learning and variation along psychiatric symptom dimensions and in autism. For more information, please visit Dr. Charpentier’s lab website: https://sldlab.umd.edu/

Areas of Interest

  • Applying this computational psychiatry approach to other clinical populations (e.g. social anxiety disorder), in hope of better distinguishing computational mechanisms that may be specifically altered along unique symptom dimensions
  • Examining the computational mechanisms of social learning during development (childhood, adolescence)
  • Investigating cognitive biases in social information processes (from seeking information to belief formation to decision-making)
  • Understanding how biased cognition can snowball into societal issues such as conspiratorial thinking
  • Developing more naturalistic paradigms and integrated models of human social interactions