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Cognitive Development and Cognitive Style

Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1983
This study was designed to examine (a) whether the process of formulating transitive inferences is either a spatial or a linguistic process, but not both, (b) whether transitivity develops from a spatial to a linguistic process as a function of cognitive growth, (c) whether the transitivity process varies according to individual preferences for and ...
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Cognition as coordinated non-cognition

Cognitive Processing, 2007
We propose that cognition is more than a collection of independent processes operating in a modular cognitive system. Instead, we propose that cognition emerges from dependencies between all of the basic systems in the brain, including goal management, perception, action, memory, reward, affect, and learning.
Lawrence W. Barsalou   +2 more
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Cognitive Technology ? Technological cognition

AI & Society, 1996
Technology, in order to be human, needs to be informed by a reflection on what it is to be a tool in ways appropriate to humans. This involves both an instrumental, appropriating aspect (‘I use this tool’) and a limiting, appropriated one (‘The tool uses me’). Cognitive Technology focuses on the ways the computer tool is used, and uses us.
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The imagination: Cognitive, pre-cognitive, and meta-cognitive aspects

Consciousness and Cognition, 2005
This article is an attempt to situate imagination within consciousness complete with its own pre-cognitive, cognitive, and meta-cognitive domains. In the first sections we briefly review traditional philosophical and psychological conceptions of the imagination.
Kieron O'Connor, Frederick Aardema
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FRAILTY AND COGNITION

Journal of Frailty & Aging, 2012
Frailty is a common, heterogeneous, geriatric syndrome associated with adverse health events. Over the last years, a growing debate has emerged concerning the inclusion of cognitive impairment in the definition of frailty. In fact, cognitive impairment has been increasingly recognized as a potential contributor to the clinical vulnerability of older ...
Houles M   +5 more
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Cognitive and non-cognitive conceptions of consciousness

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2012
In a recent article by Block [1], different interpretations of the classical Sperling experiment [2] were discussed. In this experiment, subjects were only able to report letters from one of three rows. However, with post-stimulus cueing, subjects could report whatever row they were asked.
Morten Overgaard   +3 more
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The cognitive impenetrability of cognition

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 1999
Cognitive impenetrability is really two assertions: (1) perception and cognition have access to different knowledge bases; and (2) perception does not use cognitive-style processes. The first leads to the unusual corollary that cognition is itself cognitively impenetrable.
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Cognition, Cognitive Dysfunction, and Cognitive Rehabilitation in Multiple Sclerosis

Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation Clinics of North America, 2013
This article focuses on approaches and techniques for effective cognitive rehabilitation with people who have multiple sclerosis (MS). The patterns of preserved versus disrupted neuropsychological functions are reviewed. The relevant brain anatomy and physiology that underlie the common neurocognitive and neurobehavioral changes are described.
Mary Pepping   +2 more
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Cognition

2012
Cognition is the trickiest topic in all of animal behavior. Scientists avoided this topic to blunt accusations of anthropomorphism and because they lacked the tools to delve into the activities of animal brains. That has changed remarkably in the last 40 years, and research tools involving fMRIs, mirror tests, and observations of gaze following have ...
Michael D. Breed, Janice Moore
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Cognitive Grammar

1995
AbstractThe central goal of Cognitive Grammar (CG) is to describe the structure of particular languages and develop a general framework allowing the optical description of any language. CG is a particular cognitive linguistic theory. Even within cognitive linguistics, it stands out as radical due to certain basic claims, notably that grammar is wholly ...
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