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CogNet
The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences
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MIT CogNetMIT CogNet is an electronic community for the cognitive and brain sciences. It provides access to the MIT Encyclopedia of Cognitive Sciences and other MIT Press books, as well as to MIT Press Journals in the area of cognitive and brain sciences. UMass has a subscription to CogNet. If you are are not on campus, you can access the CogNet library via the databases link on the UMass library home page.
Publisher's description of the MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (MITECS)Since the 1970s the cognitive sciences have offered multidisciplinary ways of understanding the mind and cognition. The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (MITECS) is a landmark, comprehensive reference work that represents the methodological and theoretical diversity of this changing field. At the core of the encyclopedia are 471 concise entries, from Acquisition and Adaptationism to Wundt and X-bar Theory. Each article, written by a leading researcher in the field, provides an accessible introduction to an important concept in the cognitive sciences, as well as references or further readings. Six extended essays, which collectively serve as a roadmap to the articles, provide overviews of each of six major areas of cognitive science: Philosophy; Psychology; Neurosciences; Computational Intelligence; Linguistics and Language; and Culture, Cognition, and Evolution. For both students and researchers, MITECS will be an indispensable guide to the current state of the cognitive sciences.
This is a website with interesting papers about the relation between language and the ability to read another person's mind.The relation between language and theory of mind remains in need of clarification, both at the level of language evolution, language acquisition and the very content of theory of mind. This raises the question of the very nature of theory of mind. Is it a monolithic, more or less modular mental faculty; or is it a combination of different mechanisms, some of which may be rather low-level? How much theory is there in theory of mind and how much is needed to evolve a language? Very much the same questions apply to language acquisition. This workshop will attempt to analyse the coevolution of these two uniquely human capacities, their co-dependence and interaction. |
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Angelika Kratzer, Department of Linguistics, University of Massachusetts at Amherst |
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