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25The Case of ‘Autistic’: Pejorative Uses and ReclamationErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 13 (n/a). 2026.In addition to its descriptive uses, ‘autistic’—originally a medical label—is also used pejoratively (against ingroups and outgroups), and has recently been proudly reclaimed, especially in connection with neurodiversity movements. This phenomenon raises interesting questions for the philosophical debate on pejoratives. In this paper, we focus on two such questions: (i) Is ‘autistic’ a pejorative term? And (ii), How is ‘autistic’ being reclaimed? As for (i), we argue that ‘autistic’ doesn’t look…Read more
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207Rethinking crossover and recovery in eating disorders through a dynamic and value-sensitive frameworkMedicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1 (1). 2026.Eating Disorders (EDs) raise significant challenges from a diagnostic and nosological perspective. Much of this is due to the extensive overlap among diagnostic criteria, with symptoms being shared by several conditions and subtypes. This nosological uncertainty is further exacerbated by two additional features of EDs, which will be the focus of this paper, namely diagnostic crossover and recovery. First, patients who acquire or lose one or more symptoms over time (symptom shifting) often transi…Read more
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67You can’t unlearn, and that’s a challenge for teachersPsyche. 2020.Experts would be better teachers if they could adopt the mindset of a novice, but to do so is perplexingly difficult.
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119A Critique of Stanley and Williamson's Intellectualist Account of SkillJournal of Consciousness Studies 31 (9): 200-222. 2024.One prominent intellectualist position in the debate on the nature of skill, famously defended by Stanley and Williamson (2001; 2017), claims that skill and knowing-how are reducible to knowledgethat. To defend this claim, Stanley and Williamson argue that skill and knowledge-that develop in a sufficiently similar way through different learning stages. In this paper we offer a novel argument to reject this version of intellectualism on methodological, descriptive, and conceptual grounds. We do s…Read more
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70Person-first and identity-first approaches to Autism: metaphysical and linguistic implicationsSynthese 204 (3): 1-19. 2024.Over the past few years, there has been much debate about how autistic people should be described and labeled. Two main tendencies have emerged in this discussion, usually known as the person-first approach and the identity-first approach. While the former proposes to talk about ‘person(s) with autism’, the latter claims that ‘autistic person’ is more adequate. We first discuss person-first and identity-first approaches along with the reasons that have been offered for embracing one or the other…Read more
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1478The Trade between Fiction and Reality: Smuggling across Imagination and the WorldDiscipline Filosofiche 32 (2): 191-213. 2022.The current debate on literary cognitivism in the philosophy of fiction typically assumes that we can rigorously distinguish between fictional and factual, and focuses on the question of whether and how works of fiction can impart propositional knowledge to the reader. In this paper we suggest that this way of framing the debate may be problematic. We argue that works of fiction almost inevitably include a reference to the real world and that – contrary to what is usually assumed – the exchange …Read more
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99Literalism in Autistic People: a Predictive Processing ProposalReview of Philosophy and Psychology 15 (4): 1133-1156. 2024.Autistic individuals are commonly said – and also consider themselves – to be excessively literalist, in the sense that they tend to prefer literal interpretations of words and utterances. This literalist bias seems to be fairly specific to autism and still lacks a convincing explanation. In this paper we explore a novel hypothesis that has the potential to account for the literalist bias in autism. We argue that literalism results from an atypical functioning of the predictive system: specifica…Read more
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99The structure underlying core affect and perceived affective qualities of human vocal burstsCognition and Emotion 37 (1): 1-17. 2023.Vocal bursts are non-linguistic affectively-laden sounds with a crucial function in human communication, yet their affective structure is still debated. Studies showed that ratings of valence and arousal follow a V-shaped relationship in several kinds of stimuli: high arousal ratings are more likely to go on a par with very negative or very positive valence. Across two studies, we asked participants to listen to 1,008 vocal bursts and judge both how they felt when listening to the sound (i.e. co…Read more
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1162Crossing the Threshold: An Epigenetic Alternative to Dimensional Accounts of Mental DisordersBritish Journal for the Philosophy of Science. forthcoming.Recent trends in psychiatry involve a transition from categorical to dimensional frameworks, in which the boundary between health and pathology is understood as a difference in degree rather than as a difference in kind. A major tenet of dimensional approaches is that no qualitative distinction can be made between health and pathology. As a consequence, these approaches tend to characterize such a threshold as pragmatic or conventional in nature. However, dimensional approaches to psychopatholog…Read more
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83What does it take to be rigid? Reflections on the notion of rigidity in autismFrontiers in Psychiatry 14. 2023.Characterizations of autism include multiple references to rigid or inflexible features, but the notion of rigidity itself has received little systematic discussion. In this paper we shed some light on the notion of rigidity in autism by identifying different facets of this phenomenon as discussed in the literature, such as fixed interests, insistence on sameness, inflexible adherence to routines, black-and-white mentality, intolerance of uncertainty, ritualized patterns of verbal and non-verbal…Read more
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1462The challenges raised by comorbidity in psychiatric research: The case of autismPhilosophical Psychology 35 (8): 1234-1263. 2022.Despite several criticisms surrounding the DSM classification in psychiatry, a significant bulk of research on mental conditions still operates according to two core assumptions: a) homogeneity, that is the idea that mental conditions are sufficiently homogeneous to justify generalization; b) additive comorbidity, that is the idea that the coexistence of multiple conditions in the same individual can be interpreted as additive. In this paper we take autism research as a case study to show that, …Read more
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29On the Brink of DisasterPhilosophy of Medicine 2 (2). 2021.The notions of at-risk and subthreshold conditions are increasingly discussed in psychiatry to describe mild, brief, or otherwise atypical syndromes that fail to meet the criteria for clinical relevance. However, the concept of vulnerability is still underexplored in philosophy of psychiatry. This article discusses psychiatric vulnerability to clarify some conceptual issues about the various factors contributing to vulnerability, the notions of risk and protection, and the idea that there are mu…Read more
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185Too much or too little? Disorders of agency on a spectrumEuropean Journal of Analytic Philosophy 16 (2): 5-12. 2020.Introduction to the special issue "The Bounds of Rationality"
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1258Several theories propose that one of the core functions of inner speech (IS) is to support subjects in the completion of cognitively effortful tasks, especially those involving executive functions (EF). In this paper we focus on two populations who notoriously encounter difficulties in performing EF tasks, namely, people diagnosed with schizophrenia who experience auditory verbal hallucinations (Sz-AVH) and people within the Autism Spectrum Conditions (ASC). We focus on these two populations bec…Read more
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85Correction to: Core Affect Dynamics: Arousal as a Modulator of ValenceReview of Philosophy and Psychology 11 (4): 803-803. 2020.The initial online publication contained several typesetting errors.
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107Core Affect Dynamics: Arousal as a Modulator of ValenceReview of Philosophy and Psychology 11 (4): 783-801. 2020.According to several researchers, core affect lies at the foundation of our affective lives and may be characterized as a consciously accessible state combining arousal (activated-deactivated) and valence (pleasure-displeasure). The interaction between these two dimensions is still a matter of debate. In this paper we provide a novel hypothesis concerning their interaction, by arguing that subjective arousal levels modulate the experience of a stimulus’ affective quality. All things being equal,…Read more
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1777What Makes Delusions Pathological?Philosophical Psychology 30 (4): 1-22. 2017.Bortolotti argues that we cannot distinguish delusions from other irrational beliefs in virtue of their epistemic features alone. Although her arguments are convincing, her analysis leaves an important question unanswered: What makes delusions pathological? In this paper I set out to answer this question by arguing that the pathological character of delusions arises from an executive dysfunction in a subject’s ability to detect relevance in the environment. I further suggest that this dysfunctio…Read more
Bologna, Italy
Areas of Specialization
| Philosophy of Mind |
| Philosophy of Psychology |
| Philosophy of Psychiatry and Psychopathology |