576,381 research outputs found
Cognitive control: componential or emergent?
The past twenty-five years have witnessed an increasing awareness of the importance of cognitive control in the regulation of complex behavior. It now sits alongside attention, memory, language and thinking as a distinct domain within cognitive psychology. At the same time it permeates each of these sibling domains. This paper reviews recent work on cognitive control in an attempt to provide a context for the fundamental question addressed within this Topic: is cognitive control to be understood as resulting from the interaction of multiple distinct control processes or are the phenomena of cognitive control emergent
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Context-awareness for mobile sensing: a survey and future directions
The evolution of smartphones together with increasing computational power have empowered developers to create innovative context-aware applications for recognizing user related social and cognitive activities in any situation and at any location. The existence and awareness of the context provides the capability of being conscious of physical environments or situations around mobile device users. This allows network services to respond proactively and intelligently based on such awareness. The key idea behind context-aware applications is to encourage users to collect, analyze and share local sensory knowledge in the purpose for a large scale community use by creating a smart network. The desired network is capable of making autonomous logical decisions to actuate environmental objects, and also assist individuals. However, many open challenges remain, which are mostly arisen due to the middleware services provided in mobile devices have limited resources in terms of power, memory and bandwidth. Thus, it becomes critically important to study how the drawbacks can be elaborated and resolved, and at the same time better understand the opportunities for the research community to contribute to the context-awareness. To this end, this paper surveys the literature over the period of 1991-2014 from the emerging concepts to applications of context-awareness in mobile platforms by providing up-to-date research and future research directions. Moreover, it points out the challenges faced in this regard and enlighten them by proposing possible solutions
Interpreting Practice: Dilthey, Epistemology, and the Hermeneutics of Historical Life
This paper explores Dilthey’s radical transformation of epistemology and the human sciences through his projects of a critique of historically embodied reason and his hermeneutics of historically mediated life. Answering criticisms that Dilthey overly depends on epistemology, I show how for Dilthey neither philosophy nor the human sciences should be reduced to their theoretical, epistemological, or cognitive dimensions. Dilthey approaches both immediate knowing and theoretical knowledge in the context of a hermeneutical phenomenology of historical life. Knowing is not an isolated activity but an interpretive and self-interpretive practice oriented by situated reflexive awareness and self-reflection. As embedded in an historical relational context, knowing does not only consist of epistemic validity claims about representational contents but is fundamentally practical, involving all of human existence. Empirically informed Besinnung, with its double reference to sense as meaning and bodily awareness, orients Dilthey’s inquiry rather than the “irrationalism” of immediate intuition or the “rationalism” of abstract epistemological reasoning
Learner autonomy and awareness through distance collaborative group work in English for Academic Purposes
The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40956-6_13Learner autonomy is considered to be both an important skill and attitude of learners, which involves responsibility for and control of the learning process. A key notion in autonomy is interdependence, developed through collaboration and which results in heightened awareness. Precisely, this concept lies at the core of technology applications, which facilitate interaction and collaboration at a distance. With a growing number of online ESP situations, more attention needs to be paid to virtual classrooms and the development of learner autonomy through collaboration.
In the context of a distance EAP course, this chapter examines how students carry out a collaborative language awareness task, considering that peer interaction can be an appropriate setting to develop language awareness, whether in face-to-face or online situations. Based on the framework of 'community of inquiry' (Garrison et al. 2000), this study looks at how group members interact through forum posts and wiki edits, showing how students initiate, manage and carry out the task, together with the social, cognitive, and meta-cognitive processes that are generated. Given the nature of the task, creating a language learning activity, special attention is paid to students’ focus on and discussion of topics related to language and learning. From these observations we can derive implications for online language teaching and materials design.Peer ReviewedPreprin
Awareness of cognitive abilities in the execution of activities of daily living after acquired brain injury: an evaluation protocol
Introduction One of the main limitations that can be
observed after acquired brain injury (ABI) is the alteration
of the awareness of the deficits that can occur in the
cognitive skills necessary for performing activities of daily
living (ADL). According to the Dynamic Comprehensive
Model of Awareness (DCMA), consciousness is composed
of offline component, which contains the information
stored about characteristics of the tasks and stable beliefs
about one’s own capabilities and online awareness, which
is activated in the context of the performance of a specific
task. The main objective of this project was to generate
and validate a detailed cognitive assessment protocol
within the context of ADL to evaluate the components of
DCMA.
Methods and analysis The proposed protocol consists
of two ecological tools: The Cog-Awareness ADL Scale to
measure offline component and the Awareness ADL-task:
Basic and Instrumental ADL performance-based test to
measure online awareness. The aim is to identify the
presence of cognitive deficits and anosognosia in patients
with ABI within the context of everyday life activities.
These two measures will be administered to a group
of patients with ABI. In addition, these participants will
complete another series of classic tests on anosognosia
and cognitive functions in order to find the convergent
validity of the two tests proposed in this protocol. The
external validity of the Cog-Awareness ADL Scale and the
relationships between awareness components within the
same ADL domain will be also analysed.
Ethics and dissemination This study was approved by
the Ethics Committee of Biomedical Research of Andalusia,
on 13 January /2017 (Proceeding 1/2017). All participants
are required to provide written informed consent. The
findings from this will be disseminated via scientific
publication.Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness
PSI2016-80331-PUniversity of MalagaUniversity of Vic - Central University of Catalonia (UVic-UCC
Consciousness And Self-Identity: A Phenomenological View on a Cognitive Issue
The paper aims at analyzing the inner development of self-identity from its pre-reflective level to the full awareness one. The recent findings of neurosciences and cognitive studies suggest focusing attention on the complex relation between self as consciousness and self as subjectivity, both with regard to their interdependency and to their reference to a shared context. Phenomenology, thanks to the careful consideration of the issues regarding the constitution of mental life articulated by its classic researches and current inquires, offers a valuable opportunity to set the scientific outcomes in an authentically philosophical perspective
Awareness of executive functioning as a diagnostic tool for mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer\u27s disease.
This study examined the utility of older adults’ awareness of their executive functioning abilities to predict future cognitive decline. The recently revised Cognitive Awareness Model (CAM) forms the conceptual background of this approach, and suggests that executive dysfunction disrupts awareness in a manner distinct from episodic memory dysfunction. The study design examined how awareness of executive functioning ability may predict both continuous decline on neuropsychological testing and qualitative change in diagnostic status. This form of prediction was tested using a longitudinal sample (n = 661) of older adults with either normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Executive functioning awareness was operationalized as Everyday Cognition (ECog) questionnaire discrepancy scores, made up of the difference between informant and subject reports of daily task efficiency. Executive functioning discrepancy scores were shown to have moderate utility at predicting cognitive decline on several measures and modest utility at predicting diagnostic change. However, modest convergent validity and low discriminant validity were observed for executive functioning discrepancy scores in the context of memory discrepancy scores. Future research directions are reviewed, including the need to document the time course of early memory awareness deficits vs. early executive functioning awareness deficits
Subjective Perception of Time and a Progressive Present Moment: The Neurobiological Key to Unlocking Consciousness
The conclusion of physics, within both a historical and more recent context, that an objectively progressive time and present moment are derivative notions without actual physical foundation in nature, illustrate that these perceived chronological features originate from subjective conscious experience and the neurobiological processes underlying it. Using this conclusion as a stepping stone, it is posited that the phenomena of an in-built subjective conception of a progressive present moment in time and that of conscious awareness are actually one and the same thing, and as such, are also the outcome of the same neurobiological processes. A possible explanation as to how this might be achieved by the brain through employing the neuronal induced nonconscious cognitive manipulation of a small interval of time is proposed. The CIP phenomenon, elucidated within the context of this study is also then discussed
Multimodal Trust Formation with Uninformed Cognitive Maps (UnCM)
This work describes a cognitive heuristic allowing agents to assess trust and delegations merging heterogenous information sources. The model is realized through Uninformed Cognitive Maps, based on the combination of: (i) categorization abilities (ii) history of personal experiences (iii) context awareness
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