Handbook of categorization in cognitive science /
Handbook of Categorization in Cognitive Science, Second Edition presents the study of categories and the process of categorization as viewed through the lens of the founding disciplines of the cognitive sciences, and how the study of categorization has long been at the core of each of these discipli...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam ; Cambridge, MA :
Elsevier,
[2017]
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Edición: | Second edition. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Front Cover; Handbook of Categorization in Cognitive Science; Copyright Page; Contents; List of Contributors; Preface to the First Edition; Introduction to the Second Edition; Novel contributions to the second edition; 1 Bridging the Category Divide: Introduction to the First Edition; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Organization of the Book; 1.3 Major Common Themes; 1.3.1 The Notions of Category and Categorization; 1.3.2 The Nature of Categories: Discrete, Vague, or Other; 1.3.3 Are There Modality Effects on Categories?; 1.3.4 Are There Universal Categories? Are There Innate Categories?
- 1.4 Bridging the Category DivideReferences; I. Categorization in Cognitive Science; 2 To Cognize is to Categorize: Cognition is Categorization; 2.1 Sensorimotor Systems; 2.2 Invariant Sensorimotor Features ("Affordances"); 2.3 Categorization; 2.4 Learning; 2.5 Innate Categories; 2.6 Learned Categories; 2.7 Supervised Learning; 2.8 Instrumental (Operant) Learning; 2.9 Color Categories; 2.10 Categorical Perception; 2.11 Learning Algorithms; 2.12 Unsupervised Learning; 2.13 Supervised Learning; 2.14 Vanishing Intersections?; 2.15 Direct Sensorimotor Invariants; 2.16 Abstraction and Hearsay.
- 2.17 Abstraction and Amnesia2.18 Invariance and Recurrence; 2.19 Feature Selection and Weighting; 2.20 Discrimination Versus Categorization; 2.21 Recoding and Feature Selection; 2.22 Learned Categorical Perception and the Whorf Hypothesis; 2.23 Uncertainty Reduction; 2.24 Explicit Learning; 2.25 Categorization is Abstraction; 2.26 Sensorimotor Grounding: Direct and Indirect; 2.27 The Adaptive Advantage of Language: Hearsay; 2.28 Grounding instruction in induction; 2.29 Numbers' Affordances; 2.30 Absolute Discriminables and Affordances; 2.31 Cognitive Science is Not Ontology.
- 2.32 "Abstract" Categories2.33 Cognition is Categorization; References; Appendix A There is Nothing Wrong With the "Classical Theory" of Categorization; Appendix B Associationism Begs the Question of Categorization; 3 The Role of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Mechanisms in the Maintenance of the Self-Concept: A Behavioral and Neuroscience Review; 3.1 Bottom-Up Behavioral and Neurological Processes; 3.2 Top-Down Behavioral and Neurological Processes; 3.3 Top-Down and Bottom-Up Processes Influence One Another to Maintain the Self-Concept; 3.4 Conclusion; References.
- 4 Categories and Cognitive Anthropology4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Cognition and Culture, Universalism, and Relativism; 4.3 Paradigms and Taxonomies; 4.4 Kinship Terminologies; 4.5 Color Classification; 4.6 Ethnobiology; 4.7 Towards a Science of the Stimulus; References; 5 Emotion Categorization; 5.1 Emotion Production; 5.2 Are Emotions Natural Kinds?; 5.3 Emotion Perception; 5.4 Conclusion; Acknowledgments; References; 6 Philosophical Analysis as Cognitive Psychology: The Importance of Empty Concepts; 6.1 Introduction; 6.2 Misadventures of the Classical View; 6.3 Terminological Issues.