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8. Do we access object manipulability while we categorize? Evidence from reaction time studies
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Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Preface vii
- List of contributors ix
- 1. Mental states: Evolution, function, nature 1
- 2. Lithic design space modelling and cognition in Homo floresiensis 11
- 3. "As large as you need and as small as you can": Implications of the brain size of Homo floresiensis 35
- 4. Homo on Flores: Some early implications for the evolution of language and cognition 43
- 5. Evolving artificial minds and brains 75
- 6. Multi-agent communication, planning, and collaboration based on perceptions, conceptions, and simulations 95
- 7. The modal-logical interpretation of the causation of bodily actions 123
- 8. Do we access object manipulability while we categorize? Evidence from reaction time studies 153
- 9. Speaking without the cerebellum: Language skills in a young adult with near total cerebellar agenesis 171
- 10. Ontologies as a cue for the metaphorical meaning of technical concepts 191
- 11. Anti-realist assumptions and challenges in philosophy of mind 213
- 12. Vagueness, supertranslatability, and conceptual schemes 233
- 13. Visual representation in a natural communication system: What can signed languages reveal about categorisation across different modes of representation? 247
- 14. Hidden units in child language 275
- Name index 295
- Subject index 299
- Table of contents of volume 2 303
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
- Preface vii
- List of contributors ix
- 1. Mental states: Evolution, function, nature 1
- 2. Lithic design space modelling and cognition in Homo floresiensis 11
- 3. "As large as you need and as small as you can": Implications of the brain size of Homo floresiensis 35
- 4. Homo on Flores: Some early implications for the evolution of language and cognition 43
- 5. Evolving artificial minds and brains 75
- 6. Multi-agent communication, planning, and collaboration based on perceptions, conceptions, and simulations 95
- 7. The modal-logical interpretation of the causation of bodily actions 123
- 8. Do we access object manipulability while we categorize? Evidence from reaction time studies 153
- 9. Speaking without the cerebellum: Language skills in a young adult with near total cerebellar agenesis 171
- 10. Ontologies as a cue for the metaphorical meaning of technical concepts 191
- 11. Anti-realist assumptions and challenges in philosophy of mind 213
- 12. Vagueness, supertranslatability, and conceptual schemes 233
- 13. Visual representation in a natural communication system: What can signed languages reveal about categorisation across different modes of representation? 247
- 14. Hidden units in child language 275
- Name index 295
- Subject index 299
- Table of contents of volume 2 303