<p>This book challenges neurocentrism by advocating a systemic view of cognition based on investigating how action shapes the experience of thinking, placing interactivity at its heart. This systemic viewpoint makes three main claims. First, that many elaborate cognitive skills like language, proble
Cognition Beyond the Brain: Computation, Interactivity and Human Artifice
✍ Scribed by Frédéric Vallée-Tourangeau, Stephen J. Cowley (auth.), Stephen J. Cowley, Frédéric Vallée-Tourangeau (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag London
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 291
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Cognition Beyond the Brain challenges neurocentrism by advocating a systemic view of cognition based on investigating how action shapes the experience of thinking. The systemic view steers between extended functionalism and enactivism by stressing how living beings connect bodies, technologies, language and culture. Since human thinking depends on a cultural ecology, people connect biologically-based powers with extended systems and, by so doing, they constitute cognitive systems that reach across the skin. Biological interpretation exploits extended functional systems.
Illustrating distributed cognition, one set of chapters focus on computer mediated trust, work at a construction site, judgement aggregation and crime scene investigation. Turning to how bodies manufacture skills, the remaining chapters focus on interactivity or sense-saturated coordination. The feeling of doing is crucial to solving maths problems, learning about X rays, finding an invoice number, or launching a warhead in a film. People both participate in extended systems and exert individual responsibility. Brains manufacture a now to which selves are anchored: people can act automatically or, at times, vary habits and choose to author actions. In ontogenesis, a systemic view permits rationality to be seen as gaining mastery over world-side resources. Much evidence and argument thus speaks for reconnecting the study of computation, interactivity and human artifice. Taken together, this can drive a networks revolution that gives due cognitive importance to the perceivable world that lies beyond the brain.
Cognition Beyond the Brain is a valuable reference for researchers, practitioners and graduate students within the fields of Computer Science, Psychology, Linguistics and Cognitive Science.
✦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages I-VIII
Human Thinking Beyond the Brain....Pages 1-11
Human Agency and the Resources of Reason....Pages 13-30
Judgement Aggregation and Distributed Thinking....Pages 31-51
Computer-Mediated Trust in Self-interested Expert Recommendations....Pages 53-70
Living as Languaging: Distributed Knowledge in Living Beings....Pages 71-92
The Quick and the Dead: On Temporality and Human Agency....Pages 93-112
You Want a Piece of Me? Paying Your Dues and Getting Your Due in a Distributed World....Pages 113-129
Distributed Cognition at the Crime Scene....Pages 131-146
Socially Distributed Cognition in Loosely Coupled Systems....Pages 147-169
Thinking with External Representations....Pages 171-194
Human Interactivity: Problem-Solving, Solution-Probing and Verbal Patterns in the Wild....Pages 195-221
Interactivity and Embodied Cues in Problem Solving, Learning and Insight: Further Contributions to a “Theory of Hints”....Pages 223-239
Naturalising Problem Solving....Pages 241-253
Systemic Cognition: Human Artifice in Life and Language....Pages 255-273
Back Matter....Pages 275-292
✦ Subjects
User Interfaces and Human Computer Interaction; Cognitive Psychology; Linguistics (general)
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