Canadian Sciences Speakers Network

Réseau Canadien de Panélistes Scientifiques


Igor Grossmann: CSSN Speaker

Igor Grossmann

Toronto, Ontario

Position: Professor

Organization: University of Waterloo

Igor Grossmann is Professor of Psychology at the University of Waterloo, whose interdisciplinary research bridges philosophy, anthropology, economics, and psychology to study human judgment and wisdom. He developed the Common Wisdom Model, exploring how cultural and environmental factors shape decision-making and whether wisdom is a distinct human capacity. His findings show that wisdom varies across individuals and situations, often hindered by personal involvement but improvable through techniques like adopting an observer’s perspective. Grossmann has investigated how societies evolve through cross-temporal and forecasting methods and leads the international Wise Judgment Consortium to challenge Western-centric views of decision-making. An elected Member of the College of the Royal Society of Canada and recipient of major awards from the APA and SPSP, he also founded the Forecasting Collaborative, co-hosts the On Wisdom Podcast, and leads initiatives such as World-after-COVID and Futurescape, which gather expert and public predictions on global change.

Areas of Expertise:

+ wisdom and judgment
+ cultural psychology and change
+ AI-augmented cognition

Language(s):

+ English
+ German
+ Russian
+ Spanish
+ Ukrainian


My Work

What I do:

Igor Grossmann is a Professor of Psychology at the University of Waterloo. His interdisciplinary work spans philosophy, anthropology, economics, and psychology, focusing on human judgment and wisdom. Grossmann examines whether wisdom is merely an ideal or a distinct human quality, and how cultural and environmental factors influence our decisions and behaviors. Together with his team, he developed the Common Wisdom Model, synthesizing various academic perspectives on the construct. Grossmann’s research shows that wisdom varies between individuals and situations. A notable discovery is that personal involvement can impede wise reasoning, reminiscent of Solomon—a wise king in the eyes of others, yet known for his personal follies. Moreover, wisdom is adaptable and can be enhanced through techniques like the ‘fly on the wall’ perspective, where one visualizes the situation from an observer viewpoint. Grossmann’s refugee background has deepened his interest in how cultural and environmental forces shape our thoughts, emotions, and values. He has pioneered cross-temporal and forecasting to study how societies evolve, providing deeper insights into cultural transformation. Currently, Grossmann leads the international Wise Judgment Consortium, challenging conventional Western-centric views and aiming to reshape our understanding of judgment and decision-making by incorporating cultural influences. His projects explore how metacognitive features like intellectual humility and perspective-taking vary with context, providing crucial insights into human behavior.

Ask me about:

Computational Social Science, Social and Cultural Psychology

Why me:

Grossmann has received awards from several prestigious organizations, including the American Psychological Association and the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, and he is an elected Member of the College of the Royal Society of Canada. He also founded the Forecasting Collaborative, assessing the accuracy of social science predictions on critical societal issues, and co-hosts the “On Wisdom Podcast,” which disseminates scientific knowledge to a broader audience. His notable initiatives include World-after-COVID (www.WorldafterCovid.info) and Futurescape (futurescape.uwaterloo.ca), gathering societal predictions from leading experts and the public.

Fun facts:

former competitive latin ballroom dancer (USA Dance National Gold Champion / Prechamp finalist)


About Me

Sector: Academia (Post Secondary)

English proficiency: Read, Write, Speak

Other Language(s): German, Russian, Spanish, Ukrainian

Title: Dr.

Pronouns: He/Him/His

Gender: Male

Demographic: European / White

Disability: Physical


Recent Publications

Title Year
The moral blueprint is not necessary for STEM wisdom2025
Wisdom reconsidered: A dynamic network account of metacognition and complex thought.2025
The reasonable, the rational, and the good: On folk theories of deliberative judgment2025
Cultivating wisdom through metacognition: A new frontier in decision-making under radical uncertainty.2025
Decision-making preferences for intuition, deliberation, friends or crowds in independent and interdependent societies.2025
Commonly observed sex differences in direct aggression are absent or reversed in sibling contexts2025
Goal Cognition at the Beginning and the End of the Day2025
The Reasonable, the Rational, and the Good: On Folk Theories of Deliberative Judgment2025
Dimensions of wisdom perception across twelve countries on five continents2024
Metajudgment: Metatheories and Beliefs About Good Judgment Across Societies2024
Shadows of wisdom: Classifying meta-cognitive and morally grounded narrative content via large language models2024
Responsiveness in context: Unpacking the causal model of the wisdom-responsiveness link2024
Explaining contentious political issues promotes open-minded thinking2024
Deconstructing wisdom through a cultural lens: Folk understandings of wisdom and its ontology in the Philippines and Sri Lanka2024
Reflecting on Past Theoretical Contributions in Psychological Science: A New Initiative2024
The Wise Mind Balances the Abstract and the Concrete2024
Exploring intellectual humility through the lens of artificial intelligence: Top terms, features and a predictive model2023
AI and the transformation of social science research2023
Age and gender differences in narcissism: A comprehensive study across eight measures and over 250,000 participants.2023
Les limites de l’expertise en sciences sociales : les nombreuses prévisions ratées durant la pandémie2023
On the accuracy, media representation, and public perception of psychological scientists’ judgments of societal change.2023
Insights into the accuracy of social scientists’ forecasts of societal change2023
The Dynamics of Self-Control Conflicts in Daily Life in Predicting Self-Control Success and Perceived Self-Regulatory Effectiveness2023
Explanation-Oriented (vs. Free) Discussion Promotes Open-Minded Political Reasoning2023
Family still matters: Human social motivation across 42 countries during a global pandemic2022