I’m Wilder, a psychology graduate with a research focus on cognition, systems theory, and the architecture of complex identities. My academic work centers on the intersections of cognitive science, dissociation, and adaptive reasoning—particularly where lived experience and theory converge.
Statistics, philosophy, and artificial intelligence shape my perspective alongside psychology. I most enjoy approaching questions of mind and meaning with both analytical precision and conceptual breadth.
My research interests include:
Modular theories of consciousness and selfhood;
Emergent cognition across biological and artificial systems;
The ethical design of resilient, self-reflective architectures of intelligence.
I am particularly interested in how psychological frameworks can inform the development of systems capable of adaptive, ethical, and reflective reasoning. My portfolio reflects this interdisciplinary trajectory and ongoing commitment to integrative, reflective scholarship.
I welcome opportunities for collaboration, research assistance, and applied psychological inquiry, particularly in fields involving cognition, systems-level design, and quantitative analysis.