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Handbook of Cognitive Science

An Embodied Approach

Specificaties
Gebonden, blz. | Engels
Elsevier Science | e druk, 2008
ISBN13: 9780080466163
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Elsevier Science e druk, 2008 9780080466163
Onderdeel van serie Perspectives on Cognitive Science
Verwachte levertijd ongeveer 9 werkdagen

Samenvatting

The Handbook of Cognitive Science provides an overview of recent developments in cognition research, relying upon non-classical approaches. Cognition is explained as the continuous interplay between brain, body, and environment, without relying on classical notions of computations and representation to explain cognition. The handbook serves as a valuable companion for readers interested in foundational aspects of cognitive science, and neuroscience and the philosophy of mind. The handbook begins with an introduction to embodied cognitive science, and then breaks up the chapters into separate sections on conceptual issues, formal approaches, embodiment in perception and action, embodiment from an artificial perspective, embodied meaning, and emotion and consciousness. Contributors to the book represent research overviews from around the globe including the US, UK, Spain, Germany, Switzerland, France, Sweden, and the Netherlands.

Specificaties

ISBN13:9780080466163
Taal:Engels
Bindwijze:Gebonden

Inhoudsopgave

<br>Contents</br><br>Preface </br><br>List of Contributors </br><br> 1 Directions for an Embodied Cognitive Science: Toward an Integrated Approach </br><br> Cognitivism in a Blind Alley </br><br> Alternative Approaches to Cognitivism </br><br> Post-Cognitivism in the Making: Common Ground and Conceptual Issues </br><br> Scaling up: Higher Level Cognitive Processes </br><br> Acknowledgments</br><br>Section I The Interactive Architecture of Cognition: Conceptual Issues </br><br> 2 Is Embodiment Necessary? </br><br> Critiques </br><br> Interactive Representation </br><br> What Kind of Embodiment? </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> 3 Embodiment and Explanation </br><br> Three Threads </br><br> The Separability Thesis </br><br> Beyond Flesh-Eating Functionalism </br><br> Ada, Adder, and Odder </br><br> A Tension Revealed </br><br> Participant Machinery and Morphological Computation </br><br> Quantifying Embodiment </br><br> Conclusions </br><br> Acknowledgments </br><br> 4 Can a Swarm be Embodied? </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Three Examples of Swarms </br><br> Artifi cial Swarms and Strong Embodiment </br><br> Is a Living Swarm an Embodied Entity? </br><br> Conclusion </br><br>Section II Robotics and Autonomous Agents </br><br> 5 CajunBot: A Case Study in Embodied Cognition </br><br> Introduction </br><br> CajunBot and the DARPA Grand Challenge, 2005 </br><br> CajunBot Sensor Systems </br><br> Path Planning </br><br> Steering Control </br><br> Simulations </br><br> CajunBot Performance and Results </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> Acknowledgments </br><br> 6 The Dynamics of Brain–Body–Environment Systems: A Status Report </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Experimental Accomplishments </br><br> Theoretical Accomplishments </br><br> Outstanding Challenges </br><br> 7 The Synthetic Approach to Embodied Cognition: A Primer </br><br> Introduction</br><br> Basics </br><br> Body Dynamics and Morphology </br><br> Information Self-Structuring </br><br> Learning and Development </br><br> Case Study 1: Embodied Categorization </br><br> Case Study 2: Application of Embodied Cognition to Prosthetics </br><br> Discussion: The Interaction of Physical and Information Processes </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> 8 Animate Vision, Virtual Environments, and Neural Codes </br><br> Embodied Intelligence </br><br> An Avatar Control System Design </br><br> Summary: The Advantages of Embodied Cognition </br><br>Section III Perceiving and Acting </br><br> 9 Ecological Psychology: Six Principles for an Embodied–Embedded Approach to Behavior </br><br> Ecological Principle I: Organism–Environment Systems are the Proper Units of Analysis </br><br> Ecological Principle II: Environmental Realities Should Be Defined at the Ecological Scale </br><br> Ecological Principle III: Behavior Is Emergent and Self-Organized </br><br> Ecological Principle IV: Perception and Action are Continuous and Cyclic </br><br> Ecological Principle V: Information Is Specificational </br><br> Ecological Principle VI: Perception Is of Affordances </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> 10 Seeing What We Can Do: Insights into Vision and Action Through Observations of Natural Behavior</br><br> Introduction </br><br> Methods of Assessing Visual Processes in Isolation and in Concert </br><br> Isolating Visual Processes Within an Embodied Context </br><br> Trade-Offs Between Gaze and Working Memory Use </br><br> Bridging the Gap Between Laboratory Experiments and Natural Behavior </br><br> Future Directions of Research in Embodied Visual Cognition </br><br> 11 Why We Don’t Mind to be Inconsistent </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Detecting Attributes </br><br> Spatial Perception </br><br> Inconsistent Action </br><br> Combining Information </br><br> Conscious Perception </br><br>Section IV A Dynamic Brain </br><br> 12 Neuronal and Cortical Dynamical Mechanisms Underlying Brain Functions </br><br> Introduction </br><br> How to Build a Suitable Neuronal Model for a Psychological Experiment</br><br> Calculating the f MRI Signal for an Example Set Shifting Model </br><br> Response Times and Error Rates in an Example Set Shifting Task </br><br> Summary and Back to “color phi” </br><br> 13 Dynamic Field Theory as a Framework for Understanding Embodied Cognition </br><br> Dynamical Systems </br><br> Dynamic Neural Fields and Peaks as Units of Representation </br><br> Interactions Between Multiple Activation Peaks </br><br> Preshape in Dynamic Neural Fields </br><br> Categorical Behavior from Continuous Representations </br><br> Embodying Dynamic Neural Fields on Autonomous Robots </br><br> Conclusions </br><br> 14 A Lazy Brain? Embodied Embedded Cognition and Cognitive Neuroscience </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Overview </br><br> The Computational Unfeasibility of a Brain in Complete Control </br><br> Ignorantly Successful in a User-Friendly Environment </br><br> Generating Research Questions for Cognitive Neuroscience and Robotics </br><br> Conclusion</br><br>Section V Embodied Meaning </br><br> 15 The Role of Sensory and Motor Information in Semantic Representation: A Review </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Direct Versus Indirect Engagement </br><br> A Brief Review of the Evidence </br><br> Conclusions </br><br> 16 Embodied Concept Learning </br><br> How Concepts Are Learned </br><br> Evidence for Embodied Concepts </br><br> Learning Basic Words/Concepts </br><br> Learning and Using Abstract and Technical Words and Concepts </br><br> Conclusions</br><br> 17 Mathematics, the Ultimate Challenge to Embodiment: Truth and the Grounding of Axiomatic Systems </br><br> Mathematics, a Real Challenge to Embodiment </br><br> Everyday Embodied Mechanisms for Human Imagination </br><br> Mathematical Abstraction: The Embodiment of Axioms, Sets, and Hypersets </br><br> Everyday Abstraction: The Embodiment of Spatial Construals of Time and Their “Axioms” </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> 18 Embodiment for Education </br><br> Why Education? </br><br> Embodied Mathematics</br><br> Embodied Reading </br><br> PM and IM and Vocabulary Acquisition </br><br> PM and IM in Science Exposition </br><br> Conclusions </br><br>Section VI Scaling-Up </br><br> 19 How Did We Get from There to Here? An Evolutionary Perspective on Embodied Cognition </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Flexibility and Resemblance: Keys to Off-Line Embodiment?</br><br> Future Directions </br><br> 20 Thinking with the Body: Towards Hierarchical, Scalable Cognition </br><br> Introduction </br><br> Separating Mind and Body </br><br> The Phenomenon of Control </br><br> Control from Body to Mind </br><br> Integration Is Key </br><br> Conclusions </br><br> Acknowledgments </br><br> 21 On the Grounds of (X)-Grounded Cognition </br><br> The Massive Redeployment Hypothesis </br><br> Implications of MRH for X-Grounded Cognition </br><br> Conclusion </br><br> Acknowledgments </br><br>Section VII Emotion and Social Interaction</br><br> 22 Understanding Others: Embodied Social Cognition</br><br> An Embodied Approach </br><br> Implicit Simulation or Embodied Practices</br><br> Conclusion </br><br> 23 Getting to the Heart of Emotions and Consciousness</br><br> Introduction: Descriptive Foundations and Animation </br><br> On the Distinction Between Behavior and Movement </br><br> Concepts Emanating from Movement</br><br> Affective Feelings </br><br> Dynamic Congruency </br><br>Index </br><br></br>

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        Handbook of Cognitive Science