43RD ANNUAL MEETING OF THE COGNITIVE SCIENCE SOCIETY

Abstract

All scientific disciplines associated with improving our understanding of the mind are welcome at every meeting of the Cognitive Science Society. Additionally, each annual meeting has a primary theme, or emphasis, that is of particular interest to that year’s co?chairs. The 2021 thematic emphasis is on “Comparative Cognition – Animal Minds” and will have a particularly biological orientation. Although biology, especially the disciplines of comparative psychology, animal cognition and animal communication, has always played some role in the cognitive sciences (especially in neurobiological contexts), integration of modern methods and findings from animal cognition research into mainstream cognitive science remains incomplete. This is partly due to traditional academic subdivisions, but also has historical roots: behaviorist strictures against discussing “the (human) mind” were rejected and the cognitive revolution was essentially complete for humans by the 1970s, but talk of “animal minds” remained suspect –or simply inscrutable– for many psychologists, neuroscientists, and biologists. Today, the thriving discipline of animal cognition has thrown off the last vestiges of behaviorism and produced findings of deep interest to psychologists, linguists, and philosophers, with deep implications for anthropology, computer science, and the humanities. The goal with this year’s conference theme “Comparative Cognition” will be to share the best research and findings in comparative cognition with the broad inter?disciplinary mix of cognitive scientists that attend CogSci conferences

Document Details

Document Type
DoD Grant Award
Publication Date
May 11, 2022
Source ID
FA86552110045XX0

Entities

People

  • Helmut Leder

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Heriot-Watt University
  • United States Air Force

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Psychology

Readers

  • Academic Conference Management
  • Systems Analysis and Design
  • Team-Based Human-Centered Cognitive Task Decision Making and Information Performance.