Embodied cognition (EC), the view that the body plays a central role in shaping the mind, is gaining considerable traction in cognitive science (Wilson, 2002). At the heart of EC is the idea that high-‐level cognitive processes (e.g., memory, decision-‐making, language) are influenced by sensory, motor, and affective information from the body. The last ten years have seen an explosion of theory and research connected by the term “embodiment.” A typical claim of embodied theories is that many forms of cognition make use of perceptual/action systems. That is, cognition is not something that can be accomplished with abstract symbols outside of a body that interacts with the world. Our main goals are to understand this claim, examine evidence...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied cognition (EC) underlines that cognition is constrained by the kind of body we possess, and...
Embodied cognition (EC) views propose that cognition is shaped by the kind of body that organisms po...
This article is intended as a response to Goldinger et al. and to all those, an increasing minority ...
The aim of this paper is to consider cognition as a special type of movement by emphasising the impo...
Recent years have seen a large amount of empirical studies related to ‘embodied cognition’. While in...
The concept of embodied cognition (EC) is not a settled one. A variety of theorists have attempted t...
Embodied cognition represents one of most important research programs in contemporary cognitive scie...
In the present chapter we report experiments on the relationships between visual objects and action ...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied Cognition (EC) as a learning paradigm is based on the idea of an inseparable link between b...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied cognition (EC) underlines that cognition is constrained by the kind of body we possess, and...
The most exciting hypothesis in cognitive science right now is the theory that cognition is embodied...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied cognition (EC) underlines that cognition is constrained by the kind of body we possess, and...
Embodied cognition (EC) views propose that cognition is shaped by the kind of body that organisms po...
This article is intended as a response to Goldinger et al. and to all those, an increasing minority ...
The aim of this paper is to consider cognition as a special type of movement by emphasising the impo...
Recent years have seen a large amount of empirical studies related to ‘embodied cognition’. While in...
The concept of embodied cognition (EC) is not a settled one. A variety of theorists have attempted t...
Embodied cognition represents one of most important research programs in contemporary cognitive scie...
In the present chapter we report experiments on the relationships between visual objects and action ...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied Cognition (EC) as a learning paradigm is based on the idea of an inseparable link between b...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied cognition (EC) underlines that cognition is constrained by the kind of body we possess, and...
The most exciting hypothesis in cognitive science right now is the theory that cognition is embodied...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
If you are leaning backwards in your chair, are you more likely to think about the past than the fut...
Embodied cognition (EC) underlines that cognition is constrained by the kind of body we possess, and...