Tag: Cognitive

Cognitive Analytic Therapy


Free Download Claire Corbridge, "Cognitive Analytic Therapy "
English | ISBN: 113864871X | 2017 | 180 pages | EPUB | 2 MB
Cognitive Analytic Therapy: Distinctive Features offers an introduction to what is distinctive about this increasingly popular method. Written by three Cognitive Analytic Therapists, with many years’ experience, it provides an accessible, bitesize overview of this increasingly used psychological therapy. Using the popular Distinctive Features format, this book describes 15 theoretical features and 15 practical techniques of Cognitive Analytic Therapy.

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Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance


Free Download Donald Beecher, "Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds: Cognitive Science and the Literature of the Renaissance"
English | ISBN: 0773546804 | 2016 | 496 pages | PDF | 14 MB
In Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds, Donald Beecher explores the characteristics and idiosyncrasies of the brain as they affect the study of fiction. He builds upon insights from the cognitive sciences to explain how we actualize imaginary persons, read the clues to their intentional states, assess their representations of selfhood, and empathize with their felt experiences in imaginary environments. He considers how our own faculty of memory, in all its selective particularity and planned oblivion, becomes an increasingly significant dimension of the critical act, and how our own emotions become aggressive readers of literary experience, culminating in states which define the genres of literature. Beecher illustrates his points with examples from major works of the Renaissance period, including Dr Faustus, The Faerie Queene, Measure for Measure, The Yorkshire Tragedy, Menaphon, The Dialogue of Solomon and Marcolphus, and The Moral Philosophy of Doni. In this volume, studies in the science of mind come into their own in explaining the architectures of the brain that shape such emergent properties as empathy, suspense, curiosity, the formation of communities, gossip, rationalization, confabulation, and so much more that pertains to the behaviour of characters, the orientation of readers, and the construction of meaning. Discussing a breadth of topics ? from the mysteries of the criminal mind to the psychology of tears ? Adapted Brains and Imaginary Worlds is the most comprehensive work available on the study of fictional worlds and their relation to the constitution of the human brain.

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The Sage Handbook of Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience Neuroscientific Principles, Systems and Methods


Free Download Gregory J. Boyle, "The Sage Handbook of Cognitive and Systems Neuroscience: Neuroscientific Principles, Systems and Methods"
English | ISBN: 1529753554 | 2023 | 632 pages | PDF | 30 MB
Cognitive neuroscience is the interdisciplinary study of how cognitive and intellectual functions are processed and represented within the brain, which is critical to building understanding of core psychological and behavioural processes such as learning, memory, behaviour, perception, and consciousness. Understanding these processes not only offers relevant fundamental insights into brain-behavioural relations, but may also lead to actionable knowledge that can be applied in the clinical treatment of patients with various brain-related disabilities.

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Consciousness and Creativity in Artificial Intelligence The Cognitive Side of Knowledge Management (Emerald Points)


Free Download Consciousness and Creativity in Artificial Intelligence: The Cognitive Side of Knowledge Management (Emerald Points) by Jon-Arild Johannessen
English | January 27, 2023 | ISBN: 1804551627 | 152 pages | MOBI | 5.50 Mb
With Industry 4.0 accelerating AI, synthetic knowledge and creativity, Consciousness and Creativity in Artificial Intelligence posits a central question: "Under what conditions can intelligent robots develop creativity?".

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Cognitive History Mind, Space, and Time


Free Download David Dunér, "Cognitive History: Mind, Space, and Time"
English | ISBN: 3110579677 | 2019 | 194 pages | PDF | 5 MB
This book is the first introduction to the new field called cognitive history. The last decades have seen a noticeable increase in cognitive science studies that have changed the understanding of human thinking. Its relevance for historical research cannot be overlooked any more. Cognitive history could be explained as the study of how humans in history used their cognitive abilities in order to understand the world around them and to orient themselves in it, but also how the world outside their bodies affected their way of thinking. In focus for this book is the relationship between history and cognition, the human mind’s interaction with the environment in time and space. It especially discusses certain cognitive abilities in interaction with the environment, which can be studied in historical sources, namely: evolution, language, rationality, spatiality, and materiality. Cognitive history can give us a deeper understanding of how – and not only what – people thought, and about the interaction between the human mind and the surrounding world.

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Cognitive Communication Disorders


Free Download Cognitive Communication Disorders by Michael L. Kimbarow, Sarah E. Wallace
English | October 11, 2023 | ISBN: 1635505119 | 550 pages | MOBI | 12 Mb
The fourth edition of Cognitive Communication Disorders is an essential text for graduate speech-language pathology courses on cognitively-based communication disorders. It provides vital information on the cognitive foundations of communication (attention, memory, and executive function). The book provides readers with a comprehensive theoretical and applied review of how deficits in these core cognitive abilities manifest in right hemisphere brain damage, dementia, primary progressive aphasia, concussion, and traumatic brain injury. Case studies illustrate principles of clinical management, and figures and tables facilitate understanding of neurobehavioral correlates, differential diagnoses, and other critical clinical information.

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An Introduction to the Cognitive Science of Religion Connecting Evolution, Brain, Cognition and Culture


Free Download An Introduction to the Cognitive Science of Religion: Connecting Evolution, Brain, Cognition and Culture by Claire White
English | March 14th, 2021 | ISBN: 113854146X | 352 pages | True EPUB | 8.53 MB
In recent decades, a new scientific approach to understand, explain, and predict many features of religion has emerged. The cognitive science of religion (CSR) has amassed research on the forces that shape the tendency for humans to be religious and on what forms belief takes. It suggests that religion, like language or music, naturally emerges in humans with tractable similarities. This new approach has profound implications for how we understand religion, including why it appears so easily, and why people are willing to fight-and die-for it. Yet it is not without its critics, and some fear that scholars are explaining the ineffable mystery of religion away, or showing that religion is natural proves or disproves the existence of God.

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Vygotsky and Cognitive Science Language and the Unification of the Social and Computational Mind


Free Download Vygotsky and Cognitive Science: Language and the Unification of the Social and Computational Mind By William Frawley
1997 | 384 Pages | ISBN: 0674943473 | PDF | 8 MB
Is a human being a person or a machine? Is the mind a social construction or a formal device? It is both, William Frawley tells us, and by bringing together Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory of the mind and cognitive science’s computational model, he shows us how this not only can but must be. To do so, Frawley focuses on language, particularly on how the computational mind uses language to mediate the internal and the external during thought. By reconciling the linguistic device and the linguistic person, he argues for a Vygotskyan cognitive science. Frawley begins by exploding the internalist/externalist dichotomy that presently drives cognitive science and falsely pits computationalism against socioculturalism. He replaces the reigning Platonic paradigm of computational mind-science with a framework based on an unusual, unified account of Wittgenstein, thus setting the stage for a Vygotskyan cognitive science centered on three aspects of mind: subjectivity, real-time operation, and breakdown. In this context, he demonstrates how computational psychology accommodates a critical aspect of Vygotskyan theory–private speech–as the mind’s metacomputational regulator. An examination of certain congenital disorders (such as Williams Syndrome, Turner Syndrome, and autism) that disrupt speech further clarifies the issue of computational and cognitive control.

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