Andreas’ research explores computational complexity in political decision-making. It seeks to augment the understanding of political choice by accounting for constraints such as preference orders, the limited range of issues a voter can process and the varying likelihoods of parties attaining power and delivering on their campaign promises.
Andreas holds master’s degrees in management (HEC Paris) and cognitive science (École Normale Supérieure Paris-PSL in cooperation with EHESS and Paris Cité) as well as a bachelor’s degree in business and economics (WU Vienna). He has completed his master thesis about the dimensionality of politics and voter clustering at the University of Cambridge Political Psychology Lab and conducted research at the Centre for Political Research at Sciences Po Paris.