Vincenzo Loia received the master's degree in computer science from the University of Salerno, Fisciano, Italy, in 1985, and the Ph.D. degree in computer science from the University of Paris 6, Paris, France, in 1989. He is currently a rector of the University of Salerno (from November 2019) and a full professor of computer science with the University of Salerno where he held the position of researcher from 1989 to 2000 and as an associate professor from 2000 to 2004. Since the beginning of his career, he has shown a deep and operational research interest, in particular in the use of innovative approaches for solving complex problems through new paradigms of software design and programming, that of agent and multi-agent systems; in the design and testing of systems for approximate reasoning, through the synergistic use of standard semantic technologies, description logic and fuzzy logic; in the definition of original conceptual data analysis methodologies for the extraction of knowledge from unstructured resources; in the creation of decision support systems conveyed by artificial intelligence models, cognitive architectures, computational intelligence and granular computing. Precisely with respect to the latter, it demonstrates that it has the sensitivity to understand, apply and contribute to research on models, such as granular and cognitive computing, which strongly base their principles on aspects concerning the study and analysis of human cognitive processes. These research interests have characterized his path of international dissemination through which he has established a rich network of scientific collaborations with researchers worldwide (including the close relationship with the founder of the fuzzy theory, Lotfi Zadeh). The pillars that characterize his scientific research over the years have been reflected in various application domains, from medical to legal, and more recently in the field of cyber-intelligence. Precisely in the latter area, he showshis great predisposition to multidisciplinarity, coordinating the scientific committee of the "Multidisciplinary Observatory for the fight against organized crime and terrorism" which implements a continuous scientific research activity applied to the thematic areas of computational intelligence and countering terrorist activities spread on the Web and Deep Web, in support of information analysis projects for crimes under the responsibility of DNA (National Anti-Mafia and Anti-Terrorism Directorate). Vincenzo Loia is: ¿ Editor-in-Chief and Founder of the international journal "Ambient Intelligence and Humanized Computing," Springer ¿ Editor-in-Chief of the international magazine "Evolutionary Intelligence," Springer ¿ Editor Responsible for Special Issues of the international magazine "Soft Computing," Springer ¿ Co-Editor-in-Chief of the international journal "Information Processing Systems" ¿ Associate Editor of the IEEE Transaction Systems, Man and Cybernetics: Systems journals; IEEE Transactions on Fuzzy Systems; IEEE Transactions on Cognitive and Developmental Systems. Francesco Orciuoli received the master's degree cum laude in computer science from the University of Salerno, Fisciano, Italy. He is an associate professor of computer science with the University of Salerno. His scientific activity, since the beginning of his career, is aimed at defining methods and techniques for supporting human cognitive processes (learning, decision making, reasoning and problem solving). In this regard, in recent years, he is investigating how the paradigms of granular computing (implemented with methods for approximate reasoning such as, for example, probabilistic rough set theory) and cognitive computing (e.g., three-way decisions) can be applied in synergy with other computational approaches to offer an adequate formal framework for human-data interaction applied to different domains such as, for example, intelligence, surveillance, emerg