I am an Assistant Professor at the House of Innovation, Stockholm School of Economics.
My research examines how expertise is enacted and reconfigured as AI and other computational technologies unsettle how knowledge is created and valued.
Using ethnographic methods, I examine epistemic coordination between computational and algorithmic modes of knowing, particularly that
how technologies constitute and coordinate distinct modes of knowing are coordinated
practitioners' relational, situated, and embodied modes of knowing.
My work has been published in top-tier academic journals such as Academy of Management Journal and recognized with the Best Student Paper Award (CTO Division, Academy of Management).
Building on my doctoral research on Artificial Intelligence in radiology, I am developing a research program on algorithms and embodied expertise to study cases where sensory judgment remains central but increasingly mediated by computational technologies.
initially focusing on art conservation and expanding to other sensory domains. This program will advance a multi-sensory theory of how embodied expertise gets reconfigured at the human–AI interface.