Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Abductive CognitionNeuro-multimodal Abduction

Abductive Cognition: Neuro-multimodal Abduction [In chapter three I have illustrated the main features of the so-called disembodiment of mind from the point of view of the cognitive interplay between internal and external representations, where the problem of the continuous interaction between on-line and off-line intelligence can be properly addressed. I consider this interplay critical in analyzing the relation between meaningful semiotic internal resources and devices and their dynamical contact with the externalized semiotic materiality already embedded in the artificialized environment. Hence, minds are “extended” and artificial in themselves. It is from this distributed perspective that I will further stress how abduction is essentially multimodal, in that both data and hypotheses can have a full range of verbal and sensory representations, involving words, sights, images, smells, etc., but also kinesthetic experiences and other feelings such as pain, and thus all sensory modalities. The presence of kinesthetic aspects plainly demonstrates that abductive reasoning is basically manipulative. Again, both linguistic and non linguistic signs have an intrinsic semiotic life, as particular configurations of neural networks and chemical distributions (and in terms of their transformations) at the level of human brains, and as somatic expressions. However they can also be delegated to many external objects and devices, for example written texts, diagrams, artifacts, etc. We can also see, in this regard, how unconscious factors take part in the abductive procedure, which consequently acquires the character of a kind of “thinking through doing”.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

Abductive CognitionNeuro-multimodal Abduction

Part of the Cognitive Systems Monographs Book Series (volume 3)
Abductive Cognition — Jan 1, 2009

Loading next page...
 
/lp/springer-journals/abductive-cognition-neuro-multimodal-abduction-LyE8N20jie

References (0)

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Copyright
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2009
ISBN
978-3-642-03630-9
Pages
219 –264
DOI
10.1007/978-3-642-03631-6_4
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[In chapter three I have illustrated the main features of the so-called disembodiment of mind from the point of view of the cognitive interplay between internal and external representations, where the problem of the continuous interaction between on-line and off-line intelligence can be properly addressed. I consider this interplay critical in analyzing the relation between meaningful semiotic internal resources and devices and their dynamical contact with the externalized semiotic materiality already embedded in the artificialized environment. Hence, minds are “extended” and artificial in themselves. It is from this distributed perspective that I will further stress how abduction is essentially multimodal, in that both data and hypotheses can have a full range of verbal and sensory representations, involving words, sights, images, smells, etc., but also kinesthetic experiences and other feelings such as pain, and thus all sensory modalities. The presence of kinesthetic aspects plainly demonstrates that abductive reasoning is basically manipulative. Again, both linguistic and non linguistic signs have an intrinsic semiotic life, as particular configurations of neural networks and chemical distributions (and in terms of their transformations) at the level of human brains, and as somatic expressions. However they can also be delegated to many external objects and devices, for example written texts, diagrams, artifacts, etc. We can also see, in this regard, how unconscious factors take part in the abductive procedure, which consequently acquires the character of a kind of “thinking through doing”.]

Published: Jan 1, 2009

Keywords: Emotional Intelligence; Mirror Neuron; Niche Construction; Right Hemisphere; Spatial Framework

There are no references for this article.