What makes human cognition unique




















We argue here that this is actually the second ontogenetic step in uniquely human social cognition. The first step is one year old children's understanding of persons as intentional agents, which enables skills of cultural learning and shared intentionality. View via Publisher. Save to Library Save.

Create Alert Alert. Share This Paper. Background Citations. Methods Citations. Results Citations. Citation Type. Has PDF. Publication Type. More Filters. A Meadian account of social understanding: Taking a non-mentalistic approach to infant and verbal false belief understanding. Abstract Performance on false belief tasks has long been considered a key indicator of the development of social understanding in young children. We consider the enabling conditions for performing … Expand.

The gap is social: Human shared intentionality and culture. Human beings share many cognitive skills with their nearest primate relatives, especially those for dealing with the physical world of objects and categories and quantities of objects in space and … Expand. View 1 excerpt, cites background. Understanding and sharing intentions: The origins of cultural cognition. View 3 excerpts, cites background.

ABSTRACT The ability to understand the mental states of other individuals is central to human social behavior, yet some theory of mind capacities are shared with other species. Comparisons of theory … Expand. The lazy mindreader : a humanities perspective on mindreading and multiple-order intentionality.

Human interaction is characterised by an ongoing polyphony of perspectives and perspectives-on-perspectives. Not only do we share and coordinate our own inner life with that of the people we interact … Expand. How children come to understand false beliefs: A shared intentionality account.

Cheney, Dorothy L. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Deacon, Terrence William The Symbolic Species. The Co-evolution of Language and the Brain. Donald, Merlin.

Origins of the Modern Mind. Dunbar, R. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. New York: Basic Books. Fitch, W. Tecumseh : The Evolution of Language.

Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Fodor, Jerry A. Where Cognitive Science Went Wrong. Oxford Congitive Science Series. Oxford: Clarendon. Gallese, Vittorio Cognitive Neuropsychology, , Graumann, Carl F. In: Carl F. Hurford, James M. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Jackendoff, R. Cooperation and human cognition: the Vygotskian intelligence hypothesis. Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London.

Penn, D. In: Behavioral and Bran Sciences 1: Reader, S. Rizzolatti, Giacomo and Laila Craighero. Spelke, Elizabeth S. Cambridge, MA: Bost Review. Second Edition. Malden et al. Suddendorf, T. The evolution of foresight: What is mental time travel, and is it unique to humans? Malden u. Stout D. Toth , K. Schick, and T. Chaminade : Neural correlates of Early Stone Age toolmaking: technology, language and cognition in human evolution.

Sciences : Tomasello, Michael : Constructing A Language. A Usage-Based Approach. Understanding and sharing intentions: the origins of cultural cognition. Tulving, E.

Episodic memory and autonoesis: Uniquely human? Metcalfe Eds. Verhagen, Arie : Construal and Perspectivization. In: Dirk Geeraerts and Herbert Cuyckens eds. The Oxford Handbook of Cognitive Linguistics. Between 40 and 60 puzzles for Krifka. ZAS Berlin. This site uses Akismet to reduce spam.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000