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Cognition and Life: The Autonomy of Cognition

Brain and Cognition, 1997
In this paper we propose a philosophical distinction between biological and cognitive domains based on two conditions that are postulated to obtain a useful characterization of cognition: biological grounding and explanatory sufficiency. According to this, we argue that the origin of cognition in natural systems (cognition as we know it) is the result ...
A, Moreno, J, Umerez, J, Ibañez
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Cognition and cognitive aging

Climacteric, 2007
Cognitive effects of estrogen have been considered in a number of large, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials. Most have involved older, postmenopausal women, and results of these provide little support for the view that estrogen-containing hormone therapy initiated after age 60 substantially affects mean cognitive performance over ...
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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 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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“Cognition” and Dynamical Cognitive Science

Minds and Machines, 2016
Several philosophers have expressed concerns with some recent uses of the term `cognition'. Underlying a number of these concerns are claims that cognition is only located in the brain and that no compelling case has been made to use `cognition' in any way other than as a cause of behavior that is representational in nature.
Luis H. Favela, Jonathan Martin
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Cognitive gadgets and cognitive priors

Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2019
Abstract Some of the foundations of Heyes’ radical reasoning seem to be based on a fractional selection of available evidence. Using an ethological perspective, we argue against Heyes’ rapid dismissal of innate cognitive instincts. Heyes’ use of fMRI studies of literacy to claim that culture assembles pieces of mental technology seems an example of ...
Gian Domenico Iannetti   +1 more
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The cognitive biases of cognitive biases

Emergency Medicine Australasia, 2021
AbstractAn increased awareness of the cognitive biases of clinical decision making over the last decade has not resulted in a corresponding decrease in clinician error. The inappropriate use of cognitive bias labels in adverse incident reviews can result in unintentional or intentional blame.
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The cognitive in cognitive radio

Proceedings of the 1st ACM workshop on Cognitive radio architectures for broadband, 2013
In this keynote address, the globally recognized inventor of cognitive radio will discuss the foundations of cognitive radio and its evolution into self-aware nodes and self-organizing wireless networks that accelerate the evolution of affordable broadband wireless communications products and systems.
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"Cognitive" memory

Proceedings. 2005 IEEE International Joint Conference on Neural Networks, 2005., 2006
Regarding the workings of the human mind, memory and pattern recognition seem to be intertwined. You generally do not have one without the other. Taking inspiration from life experience, a new form of computer memory has been devised. Certain conjectures about human memory are keys to the central idea.
Bernard Widrow, Juan Carlos Aragon
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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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