Conceptual RepresentationHelen Moss, James Hampton, James A. Hampton Concepts lie at the heart of our mental life, supporting a myriad of cognitive functions - including thinking and reasoning, object recognition, memory, and language comprehension and production. The nature of concepts and their representation in the mind and brain has been studied from many different perspectives and so provides valuable opportunities for integrative, interdisciplinary discussions. |
Contents
Artifacts are not ascribed essences nor are they treated as belonging | 563 |
On the conceptual basis for the count and mass noun distinction | 583 |
Object recognition under semantic impairment of conceptual regularities | 625 |
Categorisation causation and the limits of understanding | 663 |
An argument vaguely Viennese | 693 |
Access to knowledge from pictures but not words in a patient with | 725 |
Categories for names or names for categories? The interplay between | 759 |
788 | |
Other editions - View all
Conceptual Representation: A Special Issue of Language and Cognitive Processes James A. Hampton,Helen Moss No preview available - 2018 |