Fr. 240.00

Integrating the Mind - Domain General Versus Domain Specific Processes in Higher Cognition

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 1 to 3 weeks (not available at short notice)

Description

Read more

Zusatztext Integrating the Mind is a "must have" volume for working researchers and graduate students in a variety of cognitive science disciplines. - Keith Stanovich! University of TorontoThe idea that central cognitive processes may be 'massively modular' and that this modularity is underpinned by evolutionary forces! has become increasingly influential in the past 15 years. This collection provides a much needed counterweight! critically re-evaluating the evidence for the modular view! and outlining alternative 'integrated' views of central cognitive processes. - Nick Chater! Professor of Cognitive and Decision Sciences! University College London"Integrating the Mind: Domain Specific Processes in Higher Cognition is a book that challenges both the massive modularity hypothesis and extreme contextualism! perspectives on cognition that emphasize the central importance of domain-specific processes that operate only in narrow contexts." - Michael Hogan! PsycCRITIQUES Informationen zum Autor Maxwell J. Roberts is a psychology lecturer at the University of Essex. Zusammenfassung Taking a wide-ranging look at the evidence and arguments put forward in support of domain specific cognition, this book argues that domain general processes are important, and that domain specific processes cannot function without them. Inhaltsverzeichnis Roberts, Introduction. Extreme Domain Specificity and Higher Cognition. Roberts, Contextual Facilitation Methodology as a Means of Investigating Domain Specific Cognition. Noveck, Mercier, Van der Henst, To What Extent Do Social Contracts Affect Performance on Wason’s Selection Task? O’Brien, Roazzi, Athias, Carmo Brandão, What Sorts of Reasoning Modules Have Been Provided by Evolution? Some Experiments Conducted among Tukano Speakers in Brazilian Amazônia Concerning Reasoning about Conditional Propositions and about Conditional Probabilities. Over, Content-independent Conditional Inference. Sloman, Lombrozo, Malt, Mild Ontology and Domain-specific Categorization. Newell, Shanks, Perspectives on the ‘Tools’ of Decision-making. McKinnon, Levine, Moscovitch, Domain-general Contributions to Social Reasoning: The Perspective from Cognitive Neuroscience. Stenning, van Lambalgen, Explaining the Domain Generality of Human Cognition. Extreme Domain Specificity and Cognitive Development. Halford, Andrews, Domain General Processes in Higher Cognition: Analogical Reasoning, Schema Induction and Capacity Limitations. Overton, Dick, A Competence-procedural and Developmental Approach to Logical Reasoning. Happaney, Zelazo, Less Specificity in Higher Cognitive Mechanisms: Evidence from Theory of Mind. Moses, Sabbagh, Interactions between Domain-general and Domain-specific Processes in the Development of Children’s Theories of Mind. Mix, Sandhofer, Do We Need a Number Sense? Extreme Domain Specificity versus Domain General Intelligence. Roberts, Do Problem Solvers Need to be Intelligent? Simonton, Creativity: Specialised Expertise or General Cognitive Processes? Adey, The CASE for a General Factor in Intelligence. Gottfredson, Innovation, Fatal Accidents, and the Evolution of General Intelligence. Brody, Heritability and the Nomological Network of g. Chabris, Cognitive and Neurobiological Mechanisms of the Law of General Intelligence. ...

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.