ENS - Ecole Normale Supérieure
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Publications

Monograph  

Proust, J. (2021). Penser vite ou penser bien ? Odile Jacob

National journal article  

Grèzes, J., Erblang, M. , Vilarem, E., Quiquempoix, M. , Van Beers, P. , Guillard, M. , Sauvet, F. , Mennella, R. & Rabat, A. (2022). Modifications des décisions d’évitement de visages menaçants lors d’une privation totale de sommeil en lien avec l’humeur positive des individus. Médecine du Sommeil, 19(1), 29. doi:10.1016/j.msom.2022.01.119

Monograph  

Beran, M., Brandl, J., Perner, J. & Proust, J. (2012). The Foundations of Metacognition.

Other  

Bouvier, A. (2009). Joint Commitment, Coercion and Freedom in Science : Conceptual Analysis and Case Studies. , 143–61

Other  

Dezecache, G. (2013). La communication émotionnelle ou le jeu des affordances sociales. Santé Mentale, 177, 26-31

Monograph  

Dokic, J. & Proust, J. (2002). Simulation and Knowledge of Action.

Monograph  

Gutkin, B. & Ahmed, S. (2012). Computational Neuroscience of Drug Addiction.

Other  

Lebreton, M. & Palminteri, S. (2016). When are inter-individual brain-behavior correlations informative? bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/036772

Monograph  

Origgi, G. (2019). Reputation: What it is and why it Matters. Princeton University Press

Other  

Origgi, G. (2018). South, Status and Knowledge: Epistemic Dominance and Forms of Epistemic Injustice.

Other  

Origgi, G. (2018). https://www.openaire.eu.

Other  
Monograph  

Origgi, G. (2018). Reputation. What it is and Why it matters. Princeton University Press

National journal article  

Proust, J. (2021). Le naturalisme philosophique et les sciences. Raison présente, 219, 53-63. doi:10.3917/rpre.219.0053

Monograph  

Proust, J. & Fortier, M. (2018). Metacognitive Diversity - An Interdisciplinary approaches. Oxford: Oxford University Press

Monograph  

Proust, J. (2013). The Philosophy of Metacognition: Mental Agency and Self-Awareness.

Monograph  

Proust, J. (2017). Non-human Metacognition.

Other  

Ting, C. , Palminteri, S., Engelmann, J. & Lebreton, M. (2019). Decreased confidence in loss-avoidance contexts is a primary meta-cognitive bias of human reinforcement learning. bioRxiv. doi:10.1101/593368