In defense of Cognitive Pragmatics: A response to Cummings, Jaszczolt, Yokoyama, Carassa, and Colombetti
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Bruno G. Bara,
Bruno G. Bara has a PhD in Medical Psychology, and is presently Professor of Psychology at the University of Turin (Italy). His scientific career developed within the framework of cognitive science (Cognitive Science , Psychology Press 1995). In 1993, he founded the Center for Cognitive Science at the University and Polytechnic of Turin (Italy), which has become an influential school in the domain of cognitive pragmatics. His research interest focuses on the mental processes underlying communication (Cognitive Pragmatics , MIT Press 2010) through different methods: behavioral experiments in healthy children and adults, and in clinical population (e.g., Alzheimer's disease and traumatic brain and injuries).
©[2012] by Walter de Gruyter Berlin Boston
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Discourse relations in English and German discourse: Local and not-so-local constraints
- Lexical-semantic properties and contextual factors in the use of verbs of work with implicit subject arguments in Hungarian
- Politeness in the Holy Quran: A sociolinguistic and pragmatic perspective
- Teachability and bilingualism effects on third language learners' pragmatic knowledge
- In defense of Cognitive Pragmatics: A response to Cummings, Jaszczolt, Yokoyama, Carassa, and Colombetti
- Book Reviews
- Contributors to this issue
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Masthead
- Discourse relations in English and German discourse: Local and not-so-local constraints
- Lexical-semantic properties and contextual factors in the use of verbs of work with implicit subject arguments in Hungarian
- Politeness in the Holy Quran: A sociolinguistic and pragmatic perspective
- Teachability and bilingualism effects on third language learners' pragmatic knowledge
- In defense of Cognitive Pragmatics: A response to Cummings, Jaszczolt, Yokoyama, Carassa, and Colombetti
- Book Reviews
- Contributors to this issue