05087nam 2200745Ia 450 991084127650332120230725053806.01-4443-9492-41-4443-9493-21-78268-443-31-283-40813-997866134081361-4443-5075-71-4443-9491-6(CKB)2550000000063573(EBL)675172(OCoLC)742333190(SSID)ssj0000535229(PQKBManifestationID)11333946(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000535229(PQKBWorkID)10523089(PQKB)11533601(MiAaPQ)EBC675172(MiAaPQ)EBC5247950(Au-PeEL)EBL5247950(CaONFJC)MIL340813(OCoLC)746324302(EXLCZ)99255000000006357320110114d2011 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrA companion to cognitive anthropology[electronic resource] /edited by David B. Kronenfeld ... [et al.]1st ed.Chichester, West Sussex ;Malden, MA Wiley-Blackwell20111 online resource (625 p.)Blackwell companions to anthropology ;16Description based upon print version of record.1-119-11165-X 1-4051-8778-6 Includes bibliographical references and index.A Companion to Cognitive Anthropology; Contents; Notes on Contributors; Acknowledgments; Introduction; PART I History of Cognitive Anthropology; Nature and Types of Cultural Knowledge Structures; 1 A History of Cognitive Anthropology; 2 The History of the Cultural Models School Reconsidered: A Paradigm Shift in Cognitive Anthropology; 3 The Cognitive Context of Cognitive Anthropology; 4 The Limits of the Habitual: Shifting Paradigms for Language and Thought; 5 Types of Collective Representations: Cognition, Mental Architecture, and Cultural Knowledge6 Personal Knowledge and Collective RepresentationsPART II Methodologies; 7 How to Collect Data that Warrant Analysis; 8 Data, Method, and Interpretation in Cognitive Anthropology; 9 Multi-Item Scales and Cognitive Ethnography; 10 Consensus Analysis; 11 Narrative, Mind, and Culture; 12 Simulation (and Modeling); PART III Cognitive Structures of Cultural Domains; 13 Mathematical Representation of Cultural Constructs; 14 Kinship Theory and Cognitive Theory in Anthropology; 15 Numerical Cognition and Ethnomathematics16 "Indigenous Knowledge" and the Understanding of Cultural Cognition: The Contribution of Studies of Environmental Knowledge Systems17 Emotions, Motivation, and Behavior in Cognitive Anthropology; 18 Social Networks, Cognition, and Culture; PART IV Cognitive Anthropology and Other Disciplines; 19 Culture and Cognition: The Role of Cognitive Anthropology in Anthropology and the Cognitive Sciences; 20 Cultural Models, Power, and Hegemony; 21 Cognitive Anthropology through a Gendered Lens; 22 Sociality in Cognitive and Sociocultural Anthropologies: The Relationships Aren't Just Additive23 Cognitive Anthropology and Education: Foundational Models of Self and Cultural Models of Teaching and Learning in Japan and the United States24 Archaeological Approaches to Cognitive Evolution; PART V Some Examples of Contemporary Research; 25 The Distributed Cognition Model of Mind; 26 A Foundational Cultural Model in Polynesia: Monarchy, Democracy, and the Architecture of the Mind; 27 Cognitive Approaches to the Study of Romantic Love: Semantic, Cross-Cultural, and as a Process28 Trouble as Part of Everyday Life: Cognitive and Sociocultural Processes in Avoiding and Responding to Illness29 Using Consensus Analysis to Investigate Cultural Models of Alzheimer's Disease; Afterword: One Cognitive View of Culture; IndexA Companion to Cognitive Anthropology offers a comprehensive overview of the development of cognitive anthropology from its inception to the present day and presents recent findings in the areas of theory, methodology, and field research in twenty-nine key essays by leading scholars.Demonstrates the importance of cognitive anthropology as an early constituent of the cognitive sciences Examines how culturally shared and complex cognitive systems work, how they are structured, how they differ from one culture to another, how they are learned and passed onExplains how cultBlackwell companions to anthropology ;16.EthnopsychologyCognition and cultureEthnopsychology.Cognition and culture.153301SOC002010bisacshKronenfeld David B.1941-1689875MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910841276503321A companion to cognitive anthropology4138161UNINA