Dictionary Definition
cognitive adj : of or being or relating to or
involving cognition; "cognitive psychology"; "cognitive
style"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From cognosco (I know)Adjective
cognitiveTranslations
Italian
Adjective
cognitive- Feminine plural form of cognitivo
Extensive Definition
The term cognition is used in different ways by
different disciplines. In psychology, it refers to an information
processing view of an individual's psychological functions.
Other interpretations of the meaning of cognition link it to the
development of concepts; individual minds, groups, organizations,
and even larger coalitions of entities, can be modelled as
societies
which cooperate to
form concepts. The
autonomous elements of each 'society' would have the
opportunity to demonstrate emergent behavior in the face
of some crisis or opportunity. Cognition can also be interpreted as
"understanding and trying to make sense of the world".
Introduction
The term cognition (Latin: cognoscere, "to know") is used in several loosely related ways to refer to a faculty for the human-like processing of information, applying knowledge and changing preferences. Cognition or cognitive processes can be natural and artificial, conscious and not conscious; therefore, they are analyzed from different perspectives and in different contexts, in anesthesia, neurology, psychology, philosophy, systemics and computer science. The concept of cognition is closely related to such abstract concepts as mind, reasoning, perception, intelligence, learning, and many others that describe numerous capabilities of the human mind and expected properties of artificial or synthetic intelligence. Cognition is an abstract property of advanced living organisms; therefore, it is studied as a direct property of a brain or of an abstract mind on sub-symbolic and symbolic levels.In psychology and in artificial
intelligence, it is used to refer to the mental
functions, mental
processes and states of intelligent entities
(humans, human organizations, highly autonomous robots), with a
particular focus toward the study of such mental processes as
comprehension,
inferencing, decision-making,
planning and learning (see also cognitive
science and cognitivism). Recently,
advanced cognitive researchers have been especially focused on the
capacities of abstraction, generalization,
concretization/specialization
and meta-reasoning which descriptions involve such concepts as
beliefs, knowledge,
desires, preferences
and intentions of intelligent individuals/objects/agents/systems.
The term "cognition" is also used in a wider
sense to mean the act of knowing or knowledge, and may be
interpreted in a social or cultural sense to describe the emergent development of
knowledge and concepts within a group that culminates in both
thought and
action.
Cognition in mainstream psychology
The sort of mental processes described as cognitive or cognitive processes are largely influenced by research which has successfully used this paradigm in the past. Consequently, this description tends to apply to processes such as memory, attention, perception, action, problem solving and mental imagery. Traditionally, emotion was not thought of as a cognitive process. This division is now regarded as largely artificial, and much research is currently being undertaken to examine the cognitive psychology of emotion; research also includes one's awareness of strategies and methods of cognition, known as metacognition.Empirical research into cognition is usually
scientific and quantitative, or involves creating models to
describe or explain certain behaviors.
While few people would deny that cognitive
processes are a function of the brain, a cognitive theory will not
necessarily make any reference to the brain or any other biological
process (compare neurocognitive). It may
purely describe behaviour in terms of information flow or function.
Relatively recent fields of study such as cognitive
science and neuropsychology aim to
bridge this gap, using cognitive paradigms to understand how the
brain implements these information-processing functions (see also
cognitive
neuroscience), or how pure information-processing systems
(e.g., computers) can simulate cognition (see also artificial
intelligence). The branch of psychology that studies brain
injury to infer normal cognitive function is called cognitive
neuropsychology. The links of cognition to evolutionary demands are
studied through the investigation of animal
cognition. And conversely, evolutionary-based perspectives can
inform hypotheses about cognitive functional systems evolutionary
psychology.
The theoretical school of thought derived from
the cognitive approach is often called cognitivism.
The phenomenal success of the cognitive approach
can be seen by its current dominance as the core model in
contemporary psychology (usurping behaviorism in the late
1950s).
Influence and influences
This success has led to its application within a wide range of areas:- Psychology (particularly cognitive psychology), cognitive science and psychophysics
- Cognitive neuroscience, neurology and neuropsychology
- Behavioral economics and behavioral finance
- Artificial intelligence and cybernetics
- Ergonomics and user interface design
- Philosophy of mind
- Linguistics, especially psycholinguistics and cognitive linguistics
- Economics, especially experimental economics
- Learning styles and learning
In its widest sense, the field is quite eclectic
and draws from a number of areas, such as:
- Computer science and information theory, where attempts at artificial intelligence, collective intelligence and robotics focus on mimicking living beings' capacities for cognition, or applying the experience gathered in one place by one being to actions by another being elsewhere.
- Philosophy, epistemology and ontology
- Moral philosophy, where it deals with the problem of ignorance, often seen as the opposite of cognition.
- Biology and neuroscience
- Mathematics and probability
- Physics, where observer effects are studied in depth mathematically.
Cognitive ontology
On an individual being level, these questions are studied by the separate fields above, but are also more integrated into cognitive ontology of various kinds. This challenges the older linguistically dependent views of ontology, wherein one could debate being, perceiving, and doing, with no cognizance of innate human limits, varying human lifeways, and loyalties that may let a being "know" something (see qualia) that for others remains very much in doubt.On the level of an individual mind, an emergent behavior might be the
formation of a new concept, 'bubbling up' from below the conscious
level of the mind. A simple way of stating this is that beings
preserve their own attention and are at every level concerned with
avoiding interruption and
distraction. Such cognitive
specialization can be observed in particular in language, with
adults markedly less able to hear or say distinctions made in
languages to which they were not exposed in youth.
Cognition as compression
By the 1980s, researchers in the Engineering departments of the University of Leeds, UK hypothesized that 'Cognition is a form of compression', i.e., cognition was an economic, not just a philosophical or a psychological, process; in other words, skill in the process of cognition confers a competitive advantage. An implication of this view is that choices about what to cognize are being made at all levels from the neurological expression up to species-wide priority setting; in other words, the compression process is a form of optimization. This is a force for self-organizing behavior; thus we have the opportunity to see samples of emergent behavior at each successive level, from individual, to groups of individuals, to formal organizations.Cognition as and in a social process
It has been observed since antiquity that language acquisition in human children fails to emerge unless the children are exposed to language. Thus, language acquisition is an example of an emergent behavior. In this case, the individual is made up of a set of mechanisms 'expecting' such input from the social world.In education, for instance, which
has the explicit task in society of developing
child cognition, choices are made regarding the environment
and permitted action
that lead to a formed experience. In social
cognition, face
perception in human babies emerges by the age of two months.
This is in turn affected by the risk or cost of providing these, for
instance, those associated with a playground or swimming pool or
field trip. On the other hand, the macro-choices made by the
teachers are extremely influential on the micro-choices made by
children. In a large systemic perspective, cognition is considered
closely related to the social and human organization functioning
and constrains. Managerial decision
making processes can be erroneous in politics, economy and
industry for the reason of different reciprocally dependent
socio-cognitive factors. This domain became the field of interest
of emergent socio-cognitive engineering (Google
search).
Cognition in a cultural context
One famous image, Earthrise, taken
during Apollo 8, the
first Apollo mission to the Moon, shows planet Earth in a single
photograph. Earthrise is now the icon for Earth Day,
which did not arise until after the image became widespread. At
this level, an example of an 'emergent behavior' might be concern
for Spaceship
Earth, as encouraged by the development of orbiting space
observatories etc.
Other concepts which seem to have arisen only
recently (in the last century) include increased expectations for
human
rights. In this case, an example of an 'emergent behavior'
might perhaps be the use of the mass media to
publicize inequities in the human
condition, perhaps using highly portable cameras and
telephones.
Example of emergent organization
It is possible to find other examples of critical mass necessary to develop a concept. For example, a nascent coalition of individuals might fail in the implementation of some agreement among them; but in the words of Ward Cunningham, the inventor of the Wiki-wiki Web:- I thought there would be failure modes, but I wasn't surprised that communities found ways around them. I thought it was important that when the organization proved to be wrong, people could reorganize on their own, that organization could emerge.
See also
- In addition to the topics below, see the List of thinking-related topics
- Cognitive bias
- Cognitive dissonance
- Cognitive module
- Cognitive space
- Cognitive style
- Comparative Cognition
- Situated cognition
- Educational psychology
- Functional neuroimaging
- Gestalt psychology
- Holonomic brain theory
- Human cognition
- Intentionality
- List of cognitive scientists
- Molecular Cellular Cognition
- Numerical cognition
- Personal knowledge management
- Santiago theory of cognition
- Theory of cognitive development
- Theory of mind
- Decade of the Mind
References
- Lycan, W.G., (ed.). (1999). Mind and Cognition: An Anthology, 2nd Edition. Malden, Mass: Blackwell Publishers, Inc.
External links
- Cognition An international journal publishing theoretical and experimental papers on the study of the mind.
- Cognitive Processing - Quarterly, Springer
- Information on music cognition, University of Amsterdam
- Cognitie.NL Information on cognition research, Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) and University of Amsterdam (UvA)
- Emotional and Decision Making Lab, Carnegie Mellon, EDM Lab
- cognition in the CALT encyclopedia
- The Limits of Human Cognition - an article describing the evolution of mammals' cognitive abilities
cognitive in Arabic: استعراف
cognitive in Czech: Poznání
cognitive in Danish: Tænkning
cognitive in German: Kognition
cognitive in Estonian: Tunnetus
(psühholoogia)
cognitive in Spanish: Cognición
cognitive in Esperanto: Kognicio
cognitive in Persian: شناخت
cognitive in French: Cognition
cognitive in Armenian: Իմացական
գործընթացներ
cognitive in Italian: Cognizione
cognitive in Hebrew: הכרה
cognitive in Latvian: Kognitīvie procesi
cognitive in Dutch: cognitie
cognitive in Japanese: 認識
cognitive in Norwegian: Kognisjon
cognitive in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kognisjon
cognitive in Polish: Kognitywistyka
cognitive in Portuguese: Cognição
cognitive in Russian: Когнитивность
cognitive in Finnish: Kognitio
cognitive in Swedish: Kognition
cognitive in Tamil: அறிதிறன்
cognitive in Yiddish: קאגנישען
cognitive in Chinese: 認知
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
cogitative, concentrating, concentrative, conceptive, conceptual, conceptualized, contemplating, contemplative, deliberating, deliberative, excogitating, ideative, introspective, meditating, meditative, mental, museful, musing, noetic, pensive, pondering, prehensive, reflecting, reflective, ruminant, ruminating, ruminative, serious, sober, speculative, thinking, thought, thoughtful, wistful