Stenning received a bachelor's degree in philosophy and psychology at the
University of Oxford in 1969, and a PhD in discourse semantics as a basis for a theory of memory in New York, 1975, supervised by
George Armitage Miller. Between 1975 and 1983 he taught at
Liverpool University before moving to Edinburgh to the Centre for Cognitive Science in 1983. Between 1989 and 1999 he was the director of the Human Communication Research Centre. He is a Distinguished Fellow of the
Cognitive Science Society and a Foreign Fellow of the Royal Netherlands National Academy. He was chairman of an Expert Group gathered by the
European Commission Directorate-General for Research which proposed some lines of evolutionary cognitive research under the title "What it Means to be Human". His main research interest is integrating logical and psychological accounts of
reasoning. Recent work includes investigations of interpretative processes in reasoning and, with
Michiel van Lambalgen at the
Institute for Logic, Language and Computation in
Amsterdam, the use of
non-monotonic logic and
neural network implementations to model reasoning. His most recent books have dealt with how the mind responds to different representations of the same information and his 2008 book with
Michiel van Lambalgen discusses the relevance of modern mathematical logic to the study of human reasoning. He became a foreign member of the
Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005. ==Notes==