𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

Mental Models in Discourse Processing and Reasoning

✍ Scribed by Gert Rickheit and Christopher Habel (Eds.)


Publisher
Academic Press, Elsevier
Year
1999
Leaves
405
Series
Advances in Psychology 128
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Table of Contents


Content:
Introduction
Pages 1-5
Gert Rickheit, Christopher Habel

1 Mental Models: Some answers, some questions, some suggestions Original Research Article
Pages 9-40
Gert Rickheit, Lorenz Sichelschmidt

2 What's in a mental model? Original Research Article
Pages 41-56
Alan Garnham

3 What are mental models made of? Original Research Article
Pages 57-76
Anthony J. Sanford, Linda M. Moxey

4 Why mental models must be embodied Original Research Article
Pages 77-90
Arthur Glenberg

5 Taking the functional aspect of mental models as a starting point for studying discourse comprehension Original Research Article
Pages 93-112
Barbara Kaup, Stephanie Kelter, Christopher Habel

6 Cognitive aspects of coordination processes Original Research Article
Pages 113-130
Gert Rickheit, Heike Wrobel

7 Task-dependent construction of mental models as a basis for conceptual change Original Research Article
Pages 131-167
Wolfgang Schnotz, Achim Preuß

8 Grounding mental models: Subconceptual dynamics in the resolution of reference in discourse Original Research Article
Pages 169-193
Klaus Kessler

9 On the duality and on the integration of propositional and spatial representations Original Research Article
Pages 195-212
Christian Freksa, Thomas Barkowsky

10 Cognitive modelling of vision and speech understanding Original Research Article
Pages 213-236
Bernd Hildebrandt, Reinhard Moratz, Gert Rickheit, Gerhard Sagerer

11 Mental models of spatial relations and transformations from language Original Research Article
Pages 239-258
Barbara Tversky, Joseph Kim, Andrew Cohen

12 A semantics for model-based spatial reasoning Original Research Article
Pages 259-297
Janice Glasgow, Andrew Malton

13 Mental models in deductive, modal, and probabilistic reasoning Original Research Article
Pages 299-331
Patrizia Tabossi, Victoria A. Bell, P.N. Johnson-Laird

14 The construction of preferred mental models in reasoning with interval relations Original Research Article
Pages 333-357
Christoph Schlieder

15 Parts and wholes and their relations Original Research Article
Pages 359-382
Simone Pribbenow

16 Concessives and mental models Original Research Article
Pages 383-403
Ralf Klabunde

Authors
Pages 405-406

Author index
Pages 407-413

Subject index
Pages 415-419


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


Mental models in discourse
✍ Rickheit G., Habel Ch. (eds.) πŸ“‚ Library 🌐 English

Amsterdam: ELSEVIER, 1999. - 419 p.<div class="bb-sep"></div>In this interdisciplinary discussion on Mental Models the group of researchers from various areas <br/>in cognitive science tackled the following questions: What is a mental model? What are the prospects and limitations in applying the men

Context Models in Discourse Processing
✍ Dijk T.A. πŸ“‚ Library 🌐 English

In Herre van Oostendorp & Susan Goldman (Eds.), The construction of mental representations during reading. Chapter 5 (pp. 123-148). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum, 1999.<div class="bb-sep"></div>"Linguists, discourse analysts, and psychologists generally agree that context crucially influences the structure

Plato, Diagrammatic Reasoning and Mental
✍ Susanna Saracco πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2023 πŸ› Palgrave Macmillan 🌐 English

<span>This book analyses the role of diagrammatic reasoning in Plato’s philosophy: the readers will realize that Plato, describing the stages of human cognitive development using a diagram, poses a logic problem to stimulate the general reasoning abilities of his readers. Following the examination o

Trial Language: Differential Discourse P
✍ Gail Stygall πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 1994 πŸ› John Benjamins 🌐 English

This study of Anglo-American legal discourse is the first comprehensive discourse analysis of American legal language in its prototypical setting, the trial by jury. With ethnographic data gathered in a civil jury trial, the book compares the discourse processing of the legal participants and the la