POV check date July 2008 The concept of groupcognitionGroupcognition is a social, largely linguistic ... cognition relies on the ability of the participating individuals to interpret and understand the group ... of groupcognition does not deny individual cognition, but calls for a re thinking of the ontology ... Book . Online groupcognition Online interactions, if carefully planned for, can provide ideal data for research on groupcognition. If the interaction takes place through text and persistent drawings ... cognition through collaborative interaction within the online small group. This can be achieved through ... are beyond the scope of a groupcognition research agenda. The group accomplishments have been ... University has developed a methodology for chat analysis that is tuned to the exploration of groupcognition ... as groupcognition, group meaning making, the self constitution of small groups, the nature ... at other institutions The small group unit of analysis Groupcognition focuses on the small group ... communities of practice as well as to the individual person. In this sense, the theory of groupcognition ... as individual cultural psychology. Groupcognition theory proposes that small groups are the engines ... priority of groupcognition. In this sense, the small group phenomena underlie much of what takes place at the individual scale. Prejudices against the concept of groupcognition Social psychologists have occasionally referred to groupcognition. However, the discipline has generally rejected ... calculation. Book on GroupCognition The book, GroupCognition by Gerry Stahl discusses the potential of computer and network technology to promote groupcognition. It reflects on the methodology for analyzing groupcognition and provides some analyzed examples of small group cognitive interaction ... various aspects of the study of groupcognition as conducted by the Virtual Math Teams Project. Chapters ... groupcognition in small teams of students discussing mathematics online. A scientific methodology ... more details
Groupcognition provides a different approach to thinking about cognition at the group ...An extension of research into intelligence amplification and augmented cognition in individuals, augmented groupcognition allows for knowledge to be created, consumed, and exchanged among group members in alignment with their current workload, stress levels, emotional state, and other cognitive factors. Specifically, in 2005, the average knowledge worker lost 2.1 hours a day to interruptions associated with Human multitasking multitasking , resulting in a loss of 588 billion USD a year. Augmented groupcognition seeks to overcome these distractions and information pollution , to that organizations can place a priority on conserving group focus and attentiveness on priority tasks. Significant research is being done by DARPA within the field of augmented cognition, focused presently on individuals interacting in group settings. The next natural step involves incorporating elements of cybernetics to allow http papers.ssrn.com sol3 papers.cfm?abstract id 984600 harmonization of group interactions for maximum productiveness , akin to earlier knowledge management efforts in organizations. Another natural inclusion involves augmented reality , where elements of computer produced virtual reality coexist alongside interactions in the real world. There is not enough research from enough different methods to make the claim that productivity is lost without understanding several things 1. the value of the purported interruption. It is not necessarily a negative value, on several dimensions as named. 2. the nature of multi tasking skill especially as it relates to the types of tasks being done. One way to assess this is by understanding more about flow states Cziktsentmihalyi some flow states can occur during multi tasking. Reeves has also done limbic system activity and heart rates during online gaming, which are by nature highly interrupt driven and require alertness to multi tasking ... more details
Refimprove date June 2009 In science , cognition refers to mental processes. These processes include attention , memory, producing and understanding language, solving problems, and making decisions. Cognition ... social cognition to explain Attitude psychology attitudes , attribution and groups dynamics. The term cognition Latin cognoscere , to know , to conceptualize or to recognize refers to a faculty for the processing of information , applying knowledge, and changing preferences. Cognition, or cognitive ... and creed . Within psychology or philosophy, the concept of cognition is closely related to abstract concept s such as mind , intelligence , cognition is used to refer to the mental function s, thought ... of their own strategies and methods of cognition called metacognition and includes metamemory . Empirical research into cognition is usually scientific and quantitative, or involves creating models ... e.g., computers can simulate cognition see also artificial intelligence . The branch of psychology ... . The links of cognition to evolution ary demands are studied through the investigation of animal cognition . And conversely, evolutionary based perspectives can inform hypotheses about cognitive functional ... behaviorism in the late 1950s . Cognition is severely damaged in dementia. Social process This section ... where the newborn will be socialized and develop his cognition. For example, face perception ... to those faces. Education has the explicit task in society of developing cognition. Choices are made ... perspective, cognition is considered closely related to the social and human organization social ... the micro choices made by students. See also Multicol Animal cognition Cognitive bias Cognitive dissonance Cognitive linguistics Cognitive module Cognitive space Cognitive style Comparative Cognition Decade of the Mind Educational psychology Multicol break Embodied cognition Epigenetics in psychology ... Intentionality List of cognitive scientists Molecular Cellular Cognition Multicol break Numerical cognition ... more details
Unreferenced date March 2011 Computational cognition is the study of the computational basis of learning and inference by mathematical modeling, computer simulation, and behavioral experiments, seeking to learn the basis behind the processing of information. Propositions Section OR date March 2011 To make cognition computable , the following tasks should be addressed first How to define the states and the metric systems of cognition. How to measure a cognition. In 2004, Tao Yang Wuxi Tao Yang suggested a way to put cognition into a framework that is dual to the universe . He called such a framework the cognition, and called the Universe Cognition pair the Unicogse. Theory of the Unicogse The theory of the Unicogse provides a way to assign measurable means to the foundations of cognition information and truth. Information plays the same role in the Cognition as matter plays in the universe. Truth plays the same role in the Cognition as energy plays in the universe. By doing so, we expect to measure truth and information in the cognition just like we do for energy and matter in the universe. This is a way to make cognition measurable . See also There is one journal dedicated to the theory of computational cognition, the International Journal of Computational Cognition , which was established in 2003. External links and references http www.yangsky.us ijcc yangijcc.htm International Journal of Computational Cognition http web.mit.edu cocosci MIT Computational Cognitive Science Group http cocosci.berkeley.edu Berkeley Computational Cognitive Science Lab http smash.psych.nyu.edu NYU Computation and Cognition Lab http ruccs.rutgers.edu jacob feldman.html Rutgers University Computational Cognition http psiexp.ss.uci.edu research madlab.htm UCI Memory and Decision Lab Category Cognition ... more details
The need for cognition, NFC in psychology , is a personality variable reflecting the extent to which ... index.cfm?fuseaction showUIDAbstract&uid 1982 22487 001 The need for cognition. Cacioppo, John T. Petty ... 1043 doi 10.1037 0022 3514.51.5.1032 ref An individual s innate need for cognition, a concept defined ... have a high need for cognition, where they enjoy the effortful engagement of arguments, the evaluation ... in cognitive motivation, identified a need for cognition , ref They acknowledge that the existence ..., S.E. Social Psychology. New York, Prentice Hall, 1952 as belonging to that group. ref which they defined ... that higher standards for cognitive clarity are associated with greater need for cognition p.292 ..., Stotland and Wolfe p.293 br The question may be raised of the relationship of need cognition as it is presented ..., in the light of modern scholarship, that their need for cognition concept, emphasized ambiguity intolerance ... Cohen s conceptualization of need for cognition was based on the notion that individuals high in need for cognition would avoid ambiguity and achieve an integrated and meaningful world by using ... their own scale to measure the need for cognition. Stressing p.118 that they were using the word ... sense of tissue deprivation , they defined the need for cognition as an individual s tendency to engage ... need for cognition scale was slightly amended by Cacioppo, Petty and Kao 1984 and, in most of the cases ... high in the need for cognition are more likely to form their attitudes by paying close attention ... , whereas people low in the need for cognition are more likely to rely on Elaboration likelihood ... research on the need for cognition has been conducted using self report tests, where research ... have suggested that people who are high in the need for cognition scale score slightly higher in verbal ... There have been no gender differences found in relation to the need for cognition. Citation needed ... articles mi qa3852 is 200101 ai n8949421 print Moderating effects of need for cognition on attractiveness ... more details
Music cognition is an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the mental processes that support musical ... , and linguistics . History Music cognition clearly came to be recognized as a discipline in the early 1980s, with the creation of the Society for Music Perception and Cognition, European Society for the Cognitive Sciences of Music, and the journal Music Perception. The field of music cognition ... human capacity that arguably played a central role in the origins of human cognition. The ways in which music can illuminate fundamental issues in cognition have been underexamined, or even dismissed as wikt epiphenomenal epiphenomenal . However, cognition in music is more and more acknowledged as fundamental to our understanding of cognition as a whole, hence music cognition should be able to contribute ... of how listeners interpret sounds as musical events is commonly known as music cognition. In the 1970s ... the various aspects of cognition which activate psychic processes, including expectation, emotion ... be that music cognition will evolve into a prominent discipline contributing to our understanding of music ... Embodied music cognition Culture in music cognition Music therapy References reflist Further reading Encyclopedia entries Palmer, Caroline Melissa K. Jungers 2003 Music Cognition . In Lynn Nadel Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science, Vol. 3, London Nature Publishing Group, pp. 155 158. Introductory ... www.northwestern.edu observer issues 2004 10 21 music.html Music and the Mind Turning the Cognition ... www.transactionpub.com title Musical Cognition 978 1 4128 4228 0.html Musical Cognition. A Science ... publications PurwinsHardoonEditorialCS.pdf Trends and Perspectives in Music Cognition Research and Technology ... L. 1986 . Music Cognition. San Diego Academic Press. ISBN 0 12 221430 7. Hallam, Cross, & Thaut, eds ... . The Cognition of Basic Musical Structures. The MIT Press. ISBN 978 0262701051. William Forde Thompson ... modeling of music cognition A case study on model selection. Music Perception 23 5 , 365&ndash ... more details
Psychology sidebar Social cognition is the encoding, storage, retrieval, and processing, in the brain, of information relating to conspecifics , or members of the same species. At one time social cognition ... Cognition Development, Neuroscience and Autism editor Striano, T. editor2 Reid, V. publisher WileyBlackwell ... cognition is investigated. ref Cacioppo, J.T. Berntson, G.G. Sheridan, J.F. & McClintock, M.K. .... American Psychologist , 57, 819 31. ref ref cite journal last Adolphs first R. title Social cognition ... of social cognition abilities. ref name Shaffer cite book title Developmental Psychology Childhood ... development Social cognition came to prominence with the rise of cognitive psychology in the late ... . Citation needed date November 2009 Common to social cognition theories is the idea that information ... are processed. Social cognition therefore applies and extends many themes, theories and paradigms ..., S.E. title Social Cognition isbn 0071009108 publisher McGraw Hill, Inc. year 1991 ref A notable theory of social cognition is social schema theory, although this is not the basis of all studies of social cognition for example, see attribution theory . ref name Fiske It has been suggested that other ... be seeking to explain largely the same phenomena as social cognition and that these different disciplines ... Walker, I. & Donaghue, N. title Social Cognition an Integrated Introduction isbn 0 7619 4218 1 ... of action, termed motor cognition . ref http www.motorcognition.com ref Motor cognition is concerned ... female in a group of seven males, female gender schemas may be more accessible and influence the group s thinking and behavior toward the female group member. ref name Fiske Priming refers ... Social cognition researchers are also interested in how new information is integrated into pre established .... This is referred to as subtyping . Social cognition researchers are also interested in studying the regulation ... Early interest in the relationship between brain function and social cognition includes the case of Phineas ... more details
Spatial cognition is concerned with the acquisition, organization, utilization, and revision of knowledge about spatial environments. These capabilities enable humans to manage basic and high level Cognition cognitive tasks in everyday life. Numerous disciplines such as Psychology , Geographic information science Geographic Information Science , Artificial Intelligence , Cartography , etc. work together to understand spatial cognition in humans and in technical systems. References See Wikipedia Footnotes on how to create references using ref ref tags which will then appear here automatically Reflist External links http www.sis.pitt.edu scc Spatial Cognition and Computation http www.spatial cognition.de http www.elderlyjournal.com elderly health physical examination mental exam cognition What Is Spatial Cognition.html What is Spatial Cognition? http www.geog.ucsb.edu montello pubs spatcog.pdf spatial cognition An article describing spatial cognition http www.spatiallearning.org The Spatial Intelligence and Learning Center SILC See also Cognitive Science Cognition Categories Category Articles created via the Article Wizard Category Cognition ... more details
Illiberal State . ref Cultural cognition project at Yale Law School Funded by governmental and private foundation grants, much of the work on cultural cognition has been performed by an interdisciplinary group of scholars affiliated with the Cultural Cognition Project http www.culturalcognition.net ...The Cultural cognition of risk , sometimes called simply cultural cognition , refers to the hypothesized ... such conflicts consistent with sound empirical data. Theory and evidence The cultural cognition hypothesis ... to support the cultural cognition hypothesis. The first consists of general survey data that suggest ... Cognition and Public Policy , pp. 155 58. ref ref Kahan, Slovic, Braman & Gastil, Fear of Democracy .... ref Cultural Cognition Project, Second National Risk and Culture Study . ref Such experiments suggest ... beliefs congenial to their values. ref Kahan, Braman, Slovic, Cohen & Gastil, Cultural Cognition ... cognition. ref Culture and Identity Protective Cognition Explaining the White Male Effect in Risk Perception ... because a discrete group of white males who subscribe to hierarchical and individualistic values ... values and roles. Nanotechnology The Cultural Cognition Project has conducted a series ..., Cohen & Gastil, Cultural Cognition of the Risks and Benefits of Nanotechnology. ref The studies also .... ref name ReferenceA Cultural Cognition Project, Biased Assimilation, Polarization, and Cultural Credibility ... are likely to cause them to form opposing perceptions of scientific consensus , cultural cognition researchers have concluded. ref Kahan, Jenkins Smith & Braman, Cultural Cognition of Scientific ..., and private handgun possession , members of no particular cultural group, the study found, were ... have also applied the cultural cognition of risk to legal issues. One such study examined how individuals ... rape scenario, ref Kahan, Culture, Cognition, and Consent . ref and of the imminence of violence .... ref Kahan & Braman, Self Defensive Cognition of Self Defense . ref Relationship to other risk perception ... more details
scientist s and artificial intelligence artificial intelligence researcher s who study embodied cognition and the embodied mind argue that all aspects of cognition are shaped by aspects of the body. The aspects of cognition include high level mental constructs such as concept s and category categories .... The embodied mind thesis is opposed to other theories of cognition such as Cognitivism ... and neurobiology . Embodied cognition is a topic of research in social psychology social and cognitive ... cite journal last Borghi first A. M. coauthors Cimatti, F. title Embodied cognition and beyond ... j.neuropsychologia.2009.10.029 ref Embodied cognition reflects the argument that the motor system influences our cognition, just as the mind influences bodily actions. For example, when participants ... perception revised. Cognition. 21 1 1 36. PMID 4075760 ref ref Liberman AM, Mattingly IG. 1989 ... embodiment thesis. ref Cowart, Monica 2004 Embodied Cognition The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy ... addition to rational intellectual thought. In Philosophy of Mind, the idea that cognition is embodied is sympathetic with other views of cognition such as situated cognition or externalism . This is a radical .... Psychology Visual Search One embodied cognition study shows that action intention can affect processing .... ref name Bekkering & Neggers This supports embodied cognition because action intention planning to grasp ... to embodied cognition. ref name Balcetis & et al cite journal last Balcetis first E. coauthors Dunning .... A control group walked across campus but did not wear a costume. At the conclusion of the experiment ... of the body and mind in embodied cognition. ref name Balcetis & et al Perspective Researchers have ... B. coauthors Hard, B. M. title Embodied and disembodied cognition Spatial perspective taking journal Cognition year 2009 volume 110 pages 124 129 doi 10.1016 j.cognition.2008.10.008 ref They showed ... objects. ref name Tversky & Hard The researchers state that these results suggest disembodied cognition ... more details
Comparative cognition is the comparative study of the mechanisms and origins of cognition in various species . From a biological point of view, work is being done on the brains of Drosophila melanogaster fruit flies that should yield techniques precise enough to allow an understanding of the workings of the human brain on a scale appreciative of individual groups of neurons rather than the more regional scale previously used. Similarly, gene activity in the human brain is better understood through examination of the brains of mice by the Seattle based Allen Institute for Brain Science see link below , yielding the freely available Allen Brain Atlas . This type of study is related to comparative cognition, but better classified as one of comparative genomics . Increasing emphasis in psychology and ethology on the biological aspects of perception and behavior is bridging the gap between genomics and behavioral analysis . See also Cognitive science Animal cognition Animal communication Evolutionary psychology External links http www.pbs.org wnet nature animalmind Nature Inside the Animal Mind http www.sciencedaily.com releases 2006 10 061030183310.htm Article on Empathy in Elephants http www.apa.org releases baboonthought.html APA article on Abstract Thinking in Baboons http www.apa.org monitor mar03 food.html APA article on Short Term Memory in Honeybees http www.psych.ualberta.ca research ccb.php University of Alberta s Comparative Cognition and Behavior Page http www.psychol.cam.ac.uk ccl Comparative Cognition Lab at Cambridge University http www.pigeon.psy.tufts.edu ccs default.htm The Comparative Cognition Society http www.alleninstitute.org Allen Institute for Brain Science animal cognition Category Cognition Category Evolutionary biology ... more details
and intention ref Young, 2004b ref through rich contexts ref Cognition and Technology Group ... of situated cognition also involves the skilled or novice use of language by members of the group ... instruction is the Jasper series. ref The Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt, 1990 Young et ... psychology Embodied cognition Externalism Enactivism Groupcognition Relational frame theory Situational ... author Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt year 1990 title Anchored instruction and its ... and Technology Group at Vanderbilt. 1993 . Anchored instruction and situated cognition revisited. Educational Technology March Issue, 52 70. Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt. 1994 . From ...cleanup date May 2009 Situated cognition poses that knowing is inseparable from doing ref John Seely ... knowledge. In essence, cognition cannot be separated from the context. Instead knowing exists ... situated cognition gained recognition in the field of educational psychology in the late twentieth ... knowledge and the principles of Kantian empiricism . Situated cognition draws a variety of perspectives .... Clancey . Early attempts to define situated cognition focused on contrasting the emerging theory with information ... of situated cognition have focused on and draw from the concept of identity formation ref name .... ref Brown & Duguid, 2000 Clancey, 1994 ref Situated cognition perspectives have been adopted in education ... communities and artificial intelligence see Brooks, Clancey . Grounded Cognition, concerned with the role of simulations and embodiment in cognition, encompasses Cognitive Linguistics, Situated Action ... have recognized a natural affinity between situated cognition, New Literacy Studies and new literacies research Gee, 2010 . This connection is made by understanding that situated cognition maintains that individuals ... and languages used by a socio cultural group and the meanings given to these by the collective group. New literacies research examines the context and contingencies that language and tool use by individuals ... more details
Implicit cognition refers to unconscious influences such as knowledge , perception , or memory , that influence a person s behavior , even though they themselves have no conscious awareness whatsoever of those influences. ref Ray, Colleen A. and Reingold, Eyal M. http mrw.interscience.wiley.com ecs articles s00178 frame.html Encyclopedia of Cognitive Sciences , John Wiley & Sons Ltd., 2006. Retrieved February 28, 2008. ref See also Consciousness Implicit attitude Implicit stereotypes Relational Frame Theory Response Priming Subliminal stimuli References reflist 2 Further reading expand further date February 2012 Underwood, Geoffery D.M., http books.google.com books?id 27HN3bMA9JIC&dq 22Implicit cognition 22&num 100&source gbs summary s&cad 0 Implicit Cognition , Oxford University Press, 1996. Stacy, Alan W. and Wiers, Reinout W. http books.google.com books?id GxIPTpBI LwC&dq 22Implicit cognition 22&num 100&source gbs summary s&cad 0 Handbook of Implicit Cognition and Addiction , Sage Publications, Inc., 2006 http www.amyione.com ic.html Implicit Cognition and Consciousness in Scientific Speculation and Development by Amy Ione Retrieved January 30, 2008 External links http www.projectimplicit.net index.php Project Implicit http www.contextualpsychology.org ContextualPsychology.org Category Behavioural sciences Category Cognitive biases cognitive psych stub ... more details
Infobox Book name Computers and Cognition Why Minds are Not Machines title orig translator image Image Fetzer Computer and Cognition.jpg right thumb image caption author James H. Fetzer illustrator cover artist country United States language English language English series subject Psychology genre publisher Kluwer Academic Publishers release date 2001 in literature 2001 english release date media type Print pages isbn preceded by followed by notability date March 2009 Orphan date February 2009 Computers and Cognition Why Minds are Not Machines is a scholar ly book, authored by James H. Fetzer ref http www.d.umn.edu jfetzer computerscience.html Computer Science Bot generated title ref . References References psych book stub Category Cognition ... more details
italictitle Infobox journal title Brain and Cognition cover editor discipline Cognitive neuroscience , Psychophysiology language English language English abbreviation publisher Academic Press country United States frequency 9 year history 1982 present openaccess impact impact year website link1 link1 name link2 link2 name RSS atom JSTOR OCLC LCCN CODEN ISSN 0278 2626 eISSN 1090 2147 Brain and Cognition is an United States American scientific journal founded in 1982. It covers the fields of cognitive neuroscience and psychophysiology . DEFAULTSORT BRAIN AND COGNITION Category Publications established in 1982 Category Neuroscience journals Category Cognitive psychology journals Sci journal stub ... more details
Multiple issues essay like July 2011 expert Psychology date July 2011 refimprove July 2011 Hot cognition .... Hot cognition might be associated with cognitive arousal , in which a person is much more ... displays hot cognition is highly attentive and interactive with information. Sometimes the learner will respond based on emotion, without analyzing the response. Hot cognition makes it difficult for a person to calm down to analyze the process properly. Basically, hot cognition is the masterful entwinement of both a person s emotions, and their thoughts. Thus, decisions influenced by hot cognition ... Hot Cognition Emotions And Writing Behavior url http www.jacweb.org Archived volumes pdf files JAC6 Brand.pdf accessdate 2 October 2011 ref The opposite of hot cognition is cold cognition, which is excessively ... and cold cognition as a theory relative to cognitive processes and learning motivation was introduced ... simulation of hot cognition , in S. S. Tomkins & S. Messick Eds. , Computer simulation of personality pp. 277 302 . New York Wiley. ref Hot cognition is a rapid and automatic response that causes bias ... for Political Leaders, Groups, and Issues An Experimental Test of the Hot Cognition Hypothesis journal ... 9221.2005.00426.x ref An example of bias caused by hot cognition would be a juror disregarding evidence because of attraction to the defendant. Another example of hot cognition would be a person s noble .... ref cite web last Brand first Alice title Hot Cognition Emotions and Writing behavior url http www.jacweb.org Archived volumes pdf files JAC6 Brand.pdf accessdate 2 October 2011 ref Cool cognition is the absence of hot cognition in this case, dispassionate consideration of the evidence. Another ... journal last Brand first Alice G title Hot Cognition Emotions and Writing Behavior journal Journal ... A Psychophysiological Examination of the Hot Cognition Hypothesis journal Political Psychology ... journal last1 Redlawsk first1 David P. title Hot Cognition or Cool Consideration? Testing the Effects ... more details
Phineas Gage , due to trauma or traumatic brain injury. Measuring unconscious cognition To establish ... stimulus is measured. ref Schmidt, T., & Vorberg, D. 2006 . Criteria for unconscious cognition three ... to identify whether certain nonsensical and made up words belong to a group of words which they had ... . Learning, memory, and cognition, 34 5 , 1264 88. doi 10.1037 a0012943 ref An analysis ... previously as a part of the group if they followed the preset grammatical rules. This shows that most ... Greenwald, A.G., & Banaji, M.R. 1995 . Implicit social cognition Attitudes, self esteem, and stereotypes ... Differences in Implicit Cognition the Implicit Association Test. Mendeley. Journal of Personality ... Dec. 2011. http www.mendeley.com research measuring individual differences in implicit cognition the implicit .... The first group was asked to come up with instantaneous evaluations, the second group was asked to come up with an evaluation after careful consideration consciously and the third group was asked to come ... occupied their consciousness, unconsciously. It was proven in all three experiments that the group ... groups. ref Unconscious Cognition Dijksterhuis, 2004 Dijksterhuis, A. 2004 . Think different the merits ... more details
Augmented cognition AugCog is a research field at the frontier between human computer interaction , psychology , ergonomics and neuroscience , that aims at creating revolutionary human computer interactions. For instance, various research projects aim at evaluating in real time the cognitive state of a user e.g. from EEG , and design closed loop systems to modulate information flow with respect to the user s cognitive capacity. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency DARPA has an AugCog research program. Further reading Dylan Schmorrow, Ivy V. Estabrooke, Marc Grootjen Foundations of Augmented Cognition. Neuroergonomics and Operational Neuroscience, 5th International Conference, FAC 2009 Held as Part of HCI International 2009 San Diego, CA, USA, July 19 24, 2009, Proceedings Springer 2009. See also Intelligence amplification Neuroergonomics Human computer interaction External links http www.hfes.org Human Factors and Ergonomics Society http www.augmentedcognition.com Augmented cognition international society Darpa funded film http www.augmentedcognition.org video.htm Category Neuroscience Category Ergonomics Category Human computer interaction ... more details
of a animal research research experiment on animal language acquisition . Animal cognition is the title ... this heading. cn date January 2012 In practice, animal cognition mostly concerns mammals , especially ... Cognitive abilities insects . cn date January 2012 Historical Background Animal cognition ... Cognition ref . However, it is interesting to note that many cognitive experiments with animals ... name Wass Wasserman & Zentall eds 2006 Comparative Cognition ref . The scientific status of consciousness ... eds 2006 Comparative Cognition ref Methods The acceleration of research on animal cognition in the last ... & Zentall eds 2006 Comparative Cognition ref . Careful field studies explore memory for food caches ... is using a stick in order to get food. Human and animal cognition have much in common, and this is reflected ... in an article on human cognition. Of course, research in the two also differs in important respects ... are summaries of some of the major areas of research in animal cognition. Perception Like humans .... In E. A. Wasserman & T. R. Zentall Eds Comparative Cognition Experimental Explorations of Animal ... of conditioning that do not invoke attention. ref Mackintosh, N. J. 1994 Animal Learning and Cognition ... eds Comparative Cognition Experimental Exploration of Animal Intelligence New York Oxford ref Still ... 2006 ref name Wass Wasserman & Zentall eds 2006 Comparative Cognition ref and in Zentall et al ... Cognition & Behavior Reviews , 3 , 13 45. Retrieved from http psyc.queensu.ca ccbr index.html doi 10.3819 ... natural objects that vary a great deal in color and form even while belonging to the same group ..., 1849 1851. ref trained rats to discriminate between visual sequences. For example, for one group ... flavus. The Journal of Neuroscience , 12 729 735 ref Spatial cognition The ability to properly navigate ... environment. ref cite book author Lund, Nick title Animal cognition publisher Psychology Press year ... in this area Brown & Cook, 2006 ref http pigeon.psy.tufts.edu asc toc.htm Animal Spatial Cognition ... more details
0096 3445.130.3.505 ref Studies in primate cognition Theory of mind Premack and Woodruff s 1978 ... of what many claim to be a uniquely human aspect of social cognition. While it is difficult to study ... of human social cognition. There has been some controversy over the interpretation of evidence ..., maintain that Tomasello s group has misinterpreted the results of their experiments. They point ... of ape non linguistic cognition is that their inability to ask questions do have a counterpart ... problem solving through toolmaking. ref Human Ape ref See also Animal cognition Hominid intelligence ... permanence in a new world monkey species, cotton top tamarins Saguinus Oedipus url journal Animal Cognition ... face specific? url journal Animal Cognition volume 2 issue pages 123 129 cite journal doi 10.1037 ... returns url journal Neuropsychologia volume 41 issue 2 pages 221 228 pmid 12459220 refend animal cognition DEFAULTSORT Primate Cognition Category Articles with inconsistent citation formats Category ... more details
The journal Consciousness and Cognition ISSN 1053 8100 provides a forum for scientific approaches to the issues of consciousness , voluntary control, and self. ref Baars, B.J., & Banks, W.P. 1992 . On returning to consciousness Editorial , Consciousness and Cognition , pp. 1 2 ref It features empirical research in the form of regular articles and short reports and theoretical articles. Book reviews, integrative theoretical and critical literature reviews, and tutorial reviews are also published. The journal aims to be both scientifically rigorous and open to novel contributions. The journal s editor in chief is William Banks. Bruce Bridgman, James Enns, Axel Cleeremans and Antti Revonsuo are associate editors http www.elsevier.com wps find journaleditorialboard.cws home 622810 editorialboard . It is an official journal of the Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness . Bernard Baars ref http vesicle.nsi.edu users baars cv.html Baars CV ref and William Banks ref http psych.pomona.edu DrBanksWebPage Resume Vita.htm Banks Vita ref were the founding co editors of the journal. In 2011 papers from the second Online Consciousness Conference will be published in a special double issue. Topics of interest include but are not limited to Implicit memory Selective and directed attention Priming, subliminal or otherwise Neuroelectric correlates of awareness and decision making Assessment of awareness protocol analysis The properties of automaticity in perception and action Relations between awareness and attention Models of the thalamocortical complex Blindsight The neuropathology of consciousness and voluntary control Pathology of self and self awareness The development of the self concept in children Notes references External links http www.sciencedirect.com science? ob ... Consciousness and Cognition http assc.caltech.edu Association for the Scientific Study of Consciousness ASSC homepage DEFAULTSORT Consciousness And Cognition Category Consciousness ... more details
Quantum cognition is an emerging field which applies the formalism of Quantum mechanics quantum theory to model cognitive phenomena such as human memory , concepts and conceptual reasoning, human judgment , and decision making . The field clearly distinguishes itself from the Quantum mind as it is not reliant on the hypothesis that there is something quantum mechanical about the brain. br Quantum cognition uses only the mathematical basis of quantum theory to inspire and formalize models of cognition that are superior to models based on traditional probability theory . Superior means a closer fit to empirical data and or increased explanatory power. The field focuses on modeling phenomena in cognitive .... The quantum model introduces a new fundamental concept to cognition the compatibility versus ... theory as a theory of concepts. Cognition, 9 , 35 58 ref and the overextension and underextension of typicality .... Journal of Experimental Psychology Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 14 , 12 32 ref By and large, quantum cognition has drawn on quantum theory in three ways to model concepts. Exploit the contextuality of quantum theory to account for the contextuality of concepts in cognition and language and the phenomenon .... 2009 . Quantum structure in cognition. Journal of Mathematical Psychology, 53 , 314 348. ref Human ... . Initial ideas for applying quantum formalisms to cognition first appeared in the 1990s by Diederik ... issue on Quantum Cognition and Decision appeared in the Journal of Mathematical Psychology 2009, vol 53. , which planted a flag for the field. Two books closely related to quantum cognition were recently published by Khrennikov 2010 and Ivancivic and Ivancivic 2010 , and a new book on quantum cognition ..., S. and Gabora, L. 2009 . Experimental evidence for quantum structure in cognition. In P. D. Bruza ... quantum formalism to cognition. New Ideas in Psychology, 29 1 , 136 146. Aerts, D. and D ... cognition and decision. Cambridge University Press. Conte, E., Todarello, O., Federici, A., Vitiello ... more details
The concept of motor cognition grasps the notion that cognition is embodied in action, and that the motor system participates in what is usually considered as mental processing, including those involved in social interaction . ref Sommerville, J. A., & Decety, J. 2006 . Weaving the fabric of social interaction Articulating developmental psychology and cognitive neuroscience in the domain of motor cognition. Psychonomic Bulletin & Review, 13, 179 200. ref The fundamental unit of the motor cognition paradigm is action, defined as the movements produced to satisfy an intention towards a specific motor goal , or in reaction to a meaningful event in the physical and social environments. Motor cognition takes into account the preparation and production of actions, as well as the processes involved in recognizing, predicting, mimicking and understanding the behavior of other people. This paradigm has received a great deal of attention and empirical support in recents years from a variety of research domains including developmental psychology , cognitive neuroscience , and social psychology . Perception action coupling The idea of a continuity between the different aspects of motor cognition is not new. In fact, this idea can be traced to the work of the American psychologist William James and more recently, American neurophysiologist and Nobel prize winner Roger Sperry . Sperry argued ... that utilizes the motor system motor cognition hypothesis. This states that motor cognition provides ..., Magali Cossu, Giuseppe., Sinigaglia, Corrado title Motor cognition and its role in the phylogeny and ontogeny ... alters 3 month old infants perception of others actions. Cognition, 96 1 , B1 11. ref ref Nystrom ... Science 2, 96 99. ref Motor cognition and mental state understanding Humans have a tendency to interpret ... . The cognitive neuroscience of action. Wiley Blackwell. Jeannerod, M. 2006 . Motor Cognition What ... also Common coding theory Empathy Motor imagery Social cognition Social neuroscience Theory of mind ... more details
are able to remember and distinguish the contact calls of female family and bond group members ... the females of the group to another zoo. When the keepers wanted to transfer a female, they would ... group of animals, including great apes , bottlenose dolphins and magpie s, that exhibit self awareness ... 10.1073 pnas.0911239106 ref rp 20824 A South African Animal Rights group asked in a statement anticipating ... 08 29 ref See also Animal cognition Asian elephant African elephant Spindle neuron Vocal learning ... rwb publications 2009 20ByrneBatesMoss Elephant cognition CCBR.pdf Elephant Cognition in Primate ... of sight Family Members by the Amboseli Trust for Elephants animal cognition DEFAULTSORT Elephant ... more details
Disjunctive cognition is a common phenomenon in Dream dreams , first identified by psychoanalyst Mark Blechner ref Blechner, M. J. 2001 The Dream Frontier . Hillsdale, NJ The Analytic Press ref , in which two aspects of cognition do not match each other. The dreamer is aware of the disjunction, yet that does not prevent it from remaining. The most frequent disjunction is between appearance and identity, such as I knew it was my mother, even though it didn t look like her. ref cite web last Blechner first M. J. title The Dream Frontier url http www.markblechner.com dream frontier excerpts.php 1 accessdate 2009 04 01 ref The dreamer recognizes a character s identity, even though the appearance does not match the identity. Such dreams are usually not experienced as bizarre, despite the fact that such a statement in waking life would be considered psychotic . In waking life, most people would assume that they mis identified the person and correct for it, but not in dreams. ref cite web last Blechner first M. J. title The Dream Frontier url http www.markblechner.com dream frontier excerpts.php 1 accessdate 2009 04 01 ref Disjunctive cognition can also involve time perception . It is quite common to dream that as an adult, one goes back to a time and place of one s childhood . In this case, the perceived age of the dreamer is disjunctive with the setting of the dream. It is much less common to perceive the opposite dreaming of oneself as a child, where the time and place are that of one s adulthood. However, it is common to dream of other people whom one knew at an earlier age appearing in the present. This is especially frequent in the dreams of people who have lost close relatives. For example, Aharon Appelfeld reported I dreamed about my parents. They had not aged since we were together sixty three years ago in Prague, and their faces expressed amazement that I had grown ... has suggested that whenever disjunctive cognitions occur, the two aspects of cognition that are disjunctive ... more details