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Full Description
'Cognition' is not so much a field as a forest. It presents the newcomer with an immense wealth of detail: theories, models, terms and findings that are entangled and sometimes seemingly impenetrable. There is plenty of new growth - of which some will thrive and some will not. And a lot of dead wood too, some recognised and some not. How is the student to begin to make sense of all this?
Originally published in 1988, Growth Points in Cognition provided a much-needed perspective, presenting those key topics in cognitive psychology that were likely to shape the development of the subject over the next decade. The contributors discuss important areas of cognition such as perception, action, memory, comprehension and problem-solving, and examine the increasingly fruitful interplay between cognition and the allied fields of neuropsychology, cross-cultural psychology, and development. Today it can be read in its historical context.
Contents
Contributors. Preamble: More Wood, Less Trees. Acknowledgements. Figures. 1. How Do You Tell a Good Cognitive Theory When You See One? Guy Claxton 2. Perceiving Vicki Bruce 3. The Psychology of Action: Current Controversies Nigel Harvey 4. Memory Research: Past Mistakes and Future Prospects Peter Morris 5. Understanding Alan Garnham 6. Problem-solving: Representation and Discovery David Green 7. Cognitive Neuropsychology Ruth Campbell 8. Relative Universals: Perspectives on Culture and Cognition H. Valerie Curran 9. Developmental Applications of Working Memory M. Sebastian Halliday and Graham J. Hitch. Index