Animal Cognition.Herbert L. Roitblat -1998 - In George Graham & William Bechtel,A Companion to Cognitive Science. Blackwell. pp. 114–120.detailsAnimal cognition is the study of the minds of animals and the mechanisms by which those minds operate. It touches on and illuminates a wide variety of issues at the foundation of cognition science. The methods developed for its study have broad application, and its theories provide essential links between brain and behavior and between evolution and cognition. Among the foundational issues it addresses are: (1) What do we mean by mind? (2) What role does language play in the mind? (...) (3) What are the cognitive processes that operate during perception and recognition? (4) What is the nature of memory? (5) What is the relation between brain and behavior? (6) How does experience affect behavior? (shrink)
No categories
Mechanisms of imitation: The relabeled story.Herbert L. Roitblat -1998 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (5):701-702.detailsByrne & Russon propose an account of imitation that mirrors levels of behavioral organization, but they perpetuate a tendency to dismiss imitation by members of most species as the result of more primitive processes, even though these alternative phenomena are often poorly understood. They argue that the prerequisites to program-level imitation are present in great apes, but the same prerequisites appear to be present in a broad range of species. The distribution of imitative capacity across species may be more limited (...) by research methodology than by cognitive ability. (shrink)