Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science

A multidisciplinary guide to understanding the mind. A freely-available, growing collection of peer-reviewed articles introducing key topics to a broad audience of students and scholars.

Published by MIT Press · ISSN 3066-7879

179
Articles
196
Authors
21
Topics A–Z

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179 articles connected by 659 cross-references. Visualize the network, browse the matrix, and discover patterns.

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Discover peer-reviewed entries on cognitive science

Natural Kinds

Muhammad Ali Khalidi

The cognitive achievements of human beings would be inconceivable without the ability to classify the world into categories. In addition to Lassie and Rin Tin Tin, most people recognize “dogs” in general. Along with Andrew and Katrina, some people identify “hurricanes” more broadly. Thus, human bein

21 min read DOI

Inner Speech

Charles Fernyhough

Inner speech refers to the silent conversation with the self that many people report. Also termed internal monologue, inner dialogue, inner speaking, verbal thinking, and covert self-talk, inner speech is increasingly researched as an important feature of human conscious experience. New cognitive an

7 min read DOI

Affordances

Anthony Chemero

The concept of affordances was introduced by psychologist James J. Gibson as the primary entities that animals, including non-human animals, perceive. For example, rather than perceiving a solid, well-supported surface with an area of approximately 750 cm, approximately 45 cm off the floor, or even

8 min read DOI

Shared Intentionality

Michael Tomasello

Humans do many things together collaboratively as joint agents or in groups as collective agents. It turns out that these ways of operating together as a “we” have a number of special properties as compared with the cooperative interactions of other animal species. Most important are humans’ special

5 min read DOI

Compositionality

Ryan M. Nefdt, Christopher Potts

Compositionality is a central concept in cognitive science, with applications in linguistic, visual, and general cognition. In studies on language, the principle says that the meaning of a syntactically complex phrase is a function of the meanings of its constituent parts and the way they are combin

9 min read DOI

Memory

Nikola Andonovski, Kourken Michaelian

Memory is a capacity that enables an agent’s behavior to be modified and shaped by its past experience. Given this characterization, two central questions arise. First, what are the mechanisms by which such behavioral modifications are produced—that is, how does memory function? Second, should memor

8 min read DOI

Why an Open Encyclopedia?

The Open Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science provides freely-available, peer-reviewed introductions to key topics for students, scholars, and curious minds. Each article is written by leading researchers and reviewed by expert section editors, ensuring accuracy and accessibility.

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