Engineering Good-Enough Social Interaction
... The spontaneous developments of the Web 2.0 taught us how unexpected, rich and widespread new practices and forms of social coordination may be. Applications like the Wikipedia and Facebook illustrate how significant is the role of a computational and social “backdrop” to enable that coordination an ...
... The spontaneous developments of the Web 2.0 taught us how unexpected, rich and widespread new practices and forms of social coordination may be. Applications like the Wikipedia and Facebook illustrate how significant is the role of a computational and social “backdrop” to enable that coordination an ...
pptx
... • The ability to deal with some stimuli and not others is attention • Part of attention seems to be due to mental effort on your part • Part of attention seems a natural side effect of ...
... • The ability to deal with some stimuli and not others is attention • Part of attention seems to be due to mental effort on your part • Part of attention seems a natural side effect of ...
How Bodies Matter to Minds - Action
... • Operate in specially engineered, simplified environments. • Sense this micro-world and try to build two or three dimensional models of it. • Ignore the actual world, and operate on the model to produce a plan of action. • Sense-Model-Plan-Act cycle ...
... • Operate in specially engineered, simplified environments. • Sense this micro-world and try to build two or three dimensional models of it. • Ignore the actual world, and operate on the model to produce a plan of action. • Sense-Model-Plan-Act cycle ...
Stone-age minds in modern skulls
... Human language is a uniquely powerful and flexible system for communication. Evolutionary psychologists would explain language as a biological capacity, an adaptation enabling us acquire, process and produce language. Languages change as a result of their transmission via social learning, and theref ...
... Human language is a uniquely powerful and flexible system for communication. Evolutionary psychologists would explain language as a biological capacity, an adaptation enabling us acquire, process and produce language. Languages change as a result of their transmission via social learning, and theref ...
Sense of Self: The Importance of Sensing your Motions in... Maria Eunice Quilici Gonzalez ()
... of cognition. These do not reduce to mere consequences of brain processes. Embodiment refers to the specific influence that bodily characteristics have, not only on cognition, but on our very basic perceptual processes. Because our bodies have certain features (e.g. our heads cannot turn 360 degrees ...
... of cognition. These do not reduce to mere consequences of brain processes. Embodiment refers to the specific influence that bodily characteristics have, not only on cognition, but on our very basic perceptual processes. Because our bodies have certain features (e.g. our heads cannot turn 360 degrees ...
Toward a New Paradigm for Cognitive Science
... articulated as a model for understanding cognition by F. J. Varela, J. Thompson, and E. Rosch in their 1991 book The Embodied Mind. Then it has been developed as a radical alternative to dominating model of cognitive science which is characteristically formalistic and representational. At a talk at ...
... articulated as a model for understanding cognition by F. J. Varela, J. Thompson, and E. Rosch in their 1991 book The Embodied Mind. Then it has been developed as a radical alternative to dominating model of cognitive science which is characteristically formalistic and representational. At a talk at ...
The social relevance of explicit meta cognition for action and
... metacognition. At the sub-personal (implicit) level, behaviour is affected by many metacognitive properties, such as precision of sensory signals, without awareness. However, some of these properties become available at the personal (explicit) level. Examples include, perceptual fluency, action sele ...
... metacognition. At the sub-personal (implicit) level, behaviour is affected by many metacognitive properties, such as precision of sensory signals, without awareness. However, some of these properties become available at the personal (explicit) level. Examples include, perceptual fluency, action sele ...
Time and Periodicity
... • Attention, conception, association, memory, perception, reasoning, instinct, emotions, ...
... • Attention, conception, association, memory, perception, reasoning, instinct, emotions, ...
Spatial Conception of Activities: A Socio
... (“what I should be doing”; “how I should be dressed/talking/sitting”), and progress appraisals (“how well I’m doing”). Activity motives and modalities vary widely (e.g., waiting in line, listening to music, sleeping), all of which require time and occur in particular settings. Brahms is a multiagent ...
... (“what I should be doing”; “how I should be dressed/talking/sitting”), and progress appraisals (“how well I’m doing”). Activity motives and modalities vary widely (e.g., waiting in line, listening to music, sleeping), all of which require time and occur in particular settings. Brahms is a multiagent ...
Cognitive polyphasia in the MMR controversy: a theoretical and
... To examine the hypothesis of cognitive polyphasia through the MMR controversy To propose a theoretical framework for the operationalisation of cognitive polyphasia ...
... To examine the hypothesis of cognitive polyphasia through the MMR controversy To propose a theoretical framework for the operationalisation of cognitive polyphasia ...
Situating the Embodied Mind in the Landscape of Affordances Dr
... such as building a house. I use our conceptual work on affordances as well as insights from skillful action in everyday life and expertise of architects to develop a notion of ‘skilled intentionality’. The aim is to show how, using this philosophical notion, enactive/embodied cognitive science will ...
... such as building a house. I use our conceptual work on affordances as well as insights from skillful action in everyday life and expertise of architects to develop a notion of ‘skilled intentionality’. The aim is to show how, using this philosophical notion, enactive/embodied cognitive science will ...
Project 2: The situated view of perception and action conceives of
... quite a different way than traditional accounts developed in the classical paradigm of cognitive science. The serial and linear character of information processing which is so prominent in models based on Marr’s (1982) theory of vision is given up in favor of more dynamical models which introduce at ...
... quite a different way than traditional accounts developed in the classical paradigm of cognitive science. The serial and linear character of information processing which is so prominent in models based on Marr’s (1982) theory of vision is given up in favor of more dynamical models which introduce at ...
PSYC 2314 Chapter 6
... • Gibson’s Affordances – Perception is an active cognitive process in which each individual interacts selectively with a vast array of perceptual possibilities – “the environment affords opportunities” ...
... • Gibson’s Affordances – Perception is an active cognitive process in which each individual interacts selectively with a vast array of perceptual possibilities – “the environment affords opportunities” ...
Webquest webprojects situated cognition
... process normally includes higher order thinking: analysis, synthesis, problem-solving, judgment and creativity. standard set of steps that learners go through in doing a webquest. The steps include: ...
... process normally includes higher order thinking: analysis, synthesis, problem-solving, judgment and creativity. standard set of steps that learners go through in doing a webquest. The steps include: ...