The findings from these experiments have been taken to demonstrate the role of cognition in the experience of emotion. |
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The model is also consistent with the growing recognition of nonrational and nonconscious processes in cognition. |
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There is a unity between the logical and historical methods, which means that any process of logical cognition has a history of its own. |
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Theories of social cognition delineate how people process information in interpersonal interactions. |
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In cognition we direct ourselves towards entities but we can only do this if unconcealment has taken place. |
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To say that cognition is embodied means that it arises from bodily interactions with the world. |
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Collectively, the papers make a significant contribution to our understanding of science and cognition. |
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The prefrontal lobe is known to be involved in pragmatic language processes and complex social cognition. |
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By metacognition I mean knowledge about cognition itself and control of one's own cognitive processes. |
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Forging a closer relationship between the education process and the process of cognition is key to creative thinking. |
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Many biologists have begun posing and testing hypotheses concerning animal experience and cognition. |
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This research focuses on how dissociative processes and implicit cognition may act in concert to affect substance use. |
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This form of mental unity could appropriately be called unity of cognition. |
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Delirium is a disturbance of consciousness and cognition with a sudden onset that may be accompanied by increased psychomotor activity. |
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On the flip side, cognition has improved in demented or impaired people given nutritional support. |
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Most of the work in rational cognition is carried out by epistemic cognition, and must be done defeasibly. |
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Very briefly, cyberneticians studied the nervous system in order to understand human cognition. |
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The austere yet intricately planned installation unfolded like the entranceway to a temple of cognition. |
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In an information-processing approach there are no clear lines of demarcation between sensation, perception, and cognition. |
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So we simply took the next leap to say that if interracial interactions are stressful, then do they subsequently impair cognition? |
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He was deaf and dumb, and not surprisingly the Court's statement dwelt on matters of cognition and understanding. |
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Prominent theories of mind hold that human cognition generally is computational. |
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It is self-existent truth, and cognizing it is an act of revealing its validity because cognition is intrinsically absolutely reliable. |
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If search is driven both by cognition and experiential learning, then changing one's cognitive representation poses an additional risk. |
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And therefore, humanity, which comes into the picture with cognition, depends upon this living part of the planet, the so-called biosphere. |
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He is an experimental psychologist specialising in the study of human cognition and language understanding. |
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The resulting slowness of cognition is a cardinal element of the pattern of impairment. |
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In itself the a priori has nothing whatever to do with thinking and cognition. |
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His background is in human-computer interaction, design cognition, ergonomics and psychology. |
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According to Buddhist prama tenets, there are only two valid and authoritative means of veridical cognition. |
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Drugs that will improve cognition in healthy people are in the pipeline, but it could be years before you can buy them over the counter. |
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Research on a fellow primate, the rhesus monkey, reveals a gender gap in spatial cognition, but one that it is easily overcome with training. |
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Along the way, even those of us well versed in some of the more astonishing feats of animal cognition will be staggered. |
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Knowledge about cognition refers to stable and statable information about one's own or someone else's cognitive processes. |
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Is the field of canine cognition doomed forever to repeat this seemingly endless dispute? |
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Narrative approaches to therapy place emphasis on cognition and social processes in meaning making. |
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These stereotypes extend to cognition, with men reported to be systemisers and women empathisers. |
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The classic allergy symptoms such as stuffiness, eczema, wheezing, and itching may be absent, yet cognition and behavior remain affected. |
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For this is the cleverness not of cognition, but of excogitation threaded on a string of episodes a bit too thick for credence. |
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Each organ of sense perception responds to a particular sensation that leads to cognition. |
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Here are the four things cognizant people should know about the decade when computers mastered our cognition. |
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He talks with doctors and scientists who study cognition, and cites a raft of research that bolsters his hypothesis. |
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Should we be interested in following a child we are made to believe is capable of loving even though our cognition constantly alarms us that it is not? |
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She had received counseling, antidepressants, anxiolytics, and sleep medication from her former physician, but in her opinion these had merely dulled her cognition and memory. |
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It summarizes a July 2001 workshop that brought together behavioral scientists and archivists to discuss the future of data archiving for animal cognition research. |
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He also travelled to Sakya where he studied monastic discipline, phenomenology, valid cognition, the Middle Way and Guhyasamaja with lamas such as Kazhipa Losel and Rendawa. |
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This year's featured core areas include personality, cognition and perception, health and behavioral medicine, animal and human biopsychology, and applied psychology. |
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The dimensions of attitudes are grounded in the area of social psychology, which have been identified by researchers as cognition, affect, and behavior. |
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The evidence about human genetic differences in cognition found in psychometric research increasingly is getting buttressed by results from biological research. |
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In science, the best one can do is observe the behavior of dogs in natural and controlled settings, and then, on that basis, make testable inferences about canine cognition. |
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One example of the biological importance of intergenomic coadaptation is the evidence that mtDNA interaction with the nuclear genome modifies cognition in mice. |
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Vision has long been associated with reason, cognition, and empiricism. |
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For reason alone can attain to truth either in cognition or action. |
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I think we are innately suspicious of this kind of rapid cognition. |
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Mercury is neurotoxic, and even in people with low level chronic exposure, subtle preclinical effects on symptoms, mood, motor function, and cognition have been identified. |
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In this regard, Augustine's illuminationism is a worthy contender among more familiar attempts to make intellectual cognition epistemically secure and reliable. |
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Unlike other artificial intelligence systems, like medical expert systems, COG was meant to test theories of human cognition and developmental psychology. |
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Firth's conception of impartiality as disinterestedness and dispassionateness has the effect of omitting from moral cognition self-love and the self's love for particular communities. |
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Exercise improves not only physical fitness and health, but also mood and cognition. |
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Thinking and cognition can be inhibited, with executive function demonstrating particularly notable challenges. |
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The term microgenesis has been proposed for the continuous formative activity which underlies cognition. |
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Using fossil evidence in addition to information from genetics and neuroscience, the authors create a precise profile of Neandertal cognition. |
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In the area of Psychology there is Chris French who specialises in the psychology of paranormal beliefs and experiences, cognition and emotion. |
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Also, language then becomes a means of examining the original form of human cognition. |
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Comparing species' relative intelligence is complicated by differences in sensory apparatus, response modes, and nature of cognition. |
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Its function has also traditionally been associated with balance, fine motor control but more recently speech and cognition. |
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The lithology kind is one of important parameters in cognition of hydrocarbonic reservoirs manner. |
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Research reveals that affect imparts directionality to cognition, which in turn influences actions. |
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Right now, the pathophysiologic link between stenosis and cognition remains unclear. |
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This conception assumes the primordiality of theoretical cognition of things. |
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Moroz claims that the perception and cognition theories should adopt contemporary neuropsychology and Gestalt. |
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These debates about language in relation to meaning and reference, cognition and consciousness remain active today. |
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Cognitive psychology studies cognition, the mental processes' underlying behavior. |
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The modifiability of cognition and metacognition in young children with mathematics learning disabilities. |
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The anterior cingulated cortex is a major cortical area of the limbic loop system, integrating emotion and cognition. |
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Tool use by animals may indicate different levels of learning and cognition. |
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Moreover, sellers are invariably more aware of these boundedly rational features of consumer cognition than buyers themselves are. |
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Given the cluster of syndromes that occur menopausally, effects of new SERMs on cognition and affect becomes increasingly urgent. |
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Language facilitates certain types of complex thought and cognition by allowing subvocalization and organization of thoughts for performing more complex mental operations. |
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That is, the mutation underlying Timothy syndrome causes shrinkage, rather than growth, of the wiring needed for the development of neural circuits that underlie cognition. |
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Carnivoran evolution has taken yet a different course, with changes generally more strongly associated with body size rather than selection on brain size and cognition. |
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It also examines how the understanding of cognition, emotion, motivation, and similar psychological processes inform or constrain our models of cultural and social processes. |
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This demand, the reddendum, pervasively bepowers all human cognition. |
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For well understanding the omniscience of his nature, he is not so ready to deceive himself, as to falsifie unto him whose cognition is no way deludable. |
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As I have said, the first goal of this paper is to develop a Kantian argument for the existence of non-conceptual content from our cognition of enantiomorphy. |
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Certain drugs such as modafinil, used to treat narcolepsy, have been shown to improve cognition and are becoming increasingly popular with students revising for exams. |
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Fragile X syndrome is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impaired social function, cognition and speech, as well as attention deficits and anxiety. |
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The idea of modulation, however, suggests that there may be optimal levels of cognition, conation, and mood and the neurotransmitters that regulate them. |
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Character strengths are viewed as capacities of cognition, conation, affect, and behavior-the psychological ingredients for displaying virtues or human goodness. |
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Part X, titled Cognition, its compositional apex, introduces the excited final idea in the form of passacaglia. |
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It contains studio and teaching space for the Department of Art, as well as housing the Goldsmiths Digital Studios and the Centre for Cognition, Computation and Culture. |
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