All Stories

  1. Event structure, force dynamics and verb semantics
  2. Event Segmentation in the Audio Description of Films
  3. Teaching unleashes expression
  4. Reasoning with Expectations About Causal Relations
  5. Demonstration and pantomime in the evolution of teaching and communication
  6. Causal Reasoning and Event Cognition as Evolutionary Determinants of Language Structure
  7. Causal Cognition and Theory of Mind in Evolutionary Cognitive Archaeology
  8. Simile Demonstratives in Croatian
  9. Technology led to more abstract causal reasoning
  10. An Epigenetic Approach to Semantic Categories
  11. Category-based induction in conceptual spaces
  12. Where does the elephant come from? The evolution of causal cognition is the key
  13. Using Event Representations to Generate Robot Semantics
  14. Synesthetic Associations Between Voice and Gestures in Preverbal Infants: Weak Effects and Methodological Concerns
  15. Navigating cognition: Spatial codes for human thinking
  16. From Sensations to Concepts: a Proposal for Two Learning Processes
  17. Construals of meaning
  18. Time, space and events in language and cognition
  19. Directing human attention with pointing
  20. Levels of communication and lexical semantics
  21. Classical Conditioning in Social Robots
  22. Computational Complexity and Cognitive Science: How the Body and the World Help the Mind be Efficient
  23. David Makinson and the Extension of Classical Logic
  24. Modeling Diachronic Changes in Structuralism and in Conceptual Spaces
  25. Representing part–whole relations in conceptual spaces
  26. The evolution of semantics: sharing conceptual domains
  27. The Development of Semantic Space for Pointing and Verbal Communication
  28. Interpreting Robot Pointing Behavior
  29. Foresight, function representation, and social intelligence in the great apes
  30. Using Conceptual Spaces to Model Actions and Events
  31. Replies to comments
  32. Event structure, conceptual spaces and the semantics of verbs
  33. Theory change as dimensional change: conceptual spaces applied to the dynamics of empirical theories
  34. The Cognitive and Communicative Demands of Cooperation
  35. A Framework for Representing Action Meaning in Artificial Systems via Force Dimensions
  36. The Tripod Effect: Co-evolution of Cooperation, Cognition and Communication
  37. Semantics, conceptual spaces, and the meeting of minds
  38. Notes on the History of Ideas Behind AGM
  39. Choice blindness and the non-unitary nature of the human mind
  40. Semantics Based on Conceptual Spaces
  41. THE EVOLUTION OF SEMANTICS: A MEETING OF MINDS
  42. Using Conceptual Spaces to Model the Dynamics of Empirical Theories
  43. Anticipation as a Strategy: A Design Paradigm for Robotics
  44. A grounding framework
  45. The Social Stance And Its Relation To Intersubjectivity
  46. Anticipation requires adaptation
  47. The Role of Intersubjectivity in Animal and Human Cooperation
  48. Review
  49. Review
  50. Fairness without interpersonal comparisons
  51. Spatial Cognition VI. Learning, Reasoning, and Talking about Space
  52. Understanding Cultural Patterns
  53. What are the evolutionary causes of mental time travel?
  54. Mind-reading as Control Theory
  55. Evolutionary and Developmental Aspects of Intersubjectivity
  56. Editorial: Cognitive Semantics and Spatio-Temporal Ontologies
  57. Cognitive semantics and image schemas with embodied forces
  58. 6. Multi-agent communication, planning, and collaboration based on perceptions, conceptions, and simulations
  59. A REPRESENTATION THEOREM FOR VOTING WITH LOGICAL CONSEQUENCES
  60. Why don't chimps talk and humans sing like canaries?
  61. How Homo Became Sapiens
  62. Thinking from an evolutionary perspective
  63. Sensation, perception, and imagination
  64. The world within
  65. Reading other people's minds
  66. The dawn of language
  67. The origin of speech
  68. Cooperation, Conceptual Spaces and the Evolution of Semantics
  69. Triadic bodily mimesis is the difference
  70. The Dynamics of Thought
  71. CONCEPT LEARNING AND NONMONOTONIC REASONING11This chapter is an expanded and revised version of Gärdenfors (2001)
  72. Emulators as sources of hidden cognitive variables
  73. Co-operation and Communication in Apes and Humans
  74. In the Scope of Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science
  75. Concept modeling, essential properties, and similarity spaces
  76. Concept Learning: A Geometrical Model
  77. VIII -Concept Learning: A Geometrical Model
  78. Smart people who make simple heuristics work
  79. Cognitive Semantics: Meaning and Cognition
  80. Cognitive Semantics
  81. Does Semantics Need Reality?
  82. The role of memory in planning and pretense
  83. Symbolic, Conceptual and Subconceptual Representations
  84. Conceptual Spaces as a Basis for Cognitive Semantics
  85. Cued and detached representations in animal cognition
  86. Linguistic Modality as Expressions of Social Power
  87. SPEAKING ABOUT THE INNER ENVIRONMENT
  88. Conceptual spaces
  89. Three levels of inductive inference
  90. Nonmonotonic inference based on expectations
  91. The role of expectations in reasoning
  92. On the Logic of Relevance
  93. The dynamics of belief systems: Foundations versus coherence theories
  94. Belief Revision
  95. Belief revision: A vade-mecum
  96. Belief revision and nonmonotonic logic: Two sides of the same coin?
  97. Nonmonotonic inference, expectations, and neural networks
  98. An epistemic analysis of explanations and causal beliefs
  99. Induction, Conceptual Spaces and AI
  100. Decision, probability and utility, selected readings
  101. The impossibility of a paretian loyalist
  102. Is There Anything We should not Want to Know?
  103. Preface
  104. Introduction: Bayesian decision theory – foundations and problems
  105. Unreliable probabilities, risk taking, and decision making
  106. Decision, Probability and Utility
  107. Unreliable probabilities
  108. References
  109. Causation and the Dynamics of Belief
  110. Generalized Quantifiers
  111. The dynamics of belief: Contractions and revisions of probability functions
  112. Belief Revisions and the Ramsey Test for Conditionals
  113. Scientist arrested
  114. Propositional logic based on the dynamics of belief
  115. On the logic of theory change: Partial meet contraction and revision functions
  116. Hector-Neri Castañeda. Thinking and doing. The philosophical foundations of institutions. Philosophical studies series in philosophy, vol. 7. D. Reidel Publishing Company, Dordrecht and Boston 1975, XVIII + 366 pp.
  117. Epistemic Importance and the Logic of Theory Change
  118. Epistemic importance and minimal changes of belief
  119. The Dynamics of Belief as a Basis for Logic
  120. Decision making with unreliable probabilities
  121. On the information about individual utilities used in social choice
  122. Imaging and Conditionalization
  123. Dynamic models as tools for forecasting and planning: A presentation and some methodological aspects
  124. Rights, Games and Social Choice
  125. A Pragmatic Approach to Explanations
  126. Forecasting nonstationary time series—Some methodological aspects
  127. On the information provided by forecasting models
  128. A concise proof of theorem on manipulation of social choice functions
  129. Manipulation of social choice functions
  130. Relevance and Redundancy in Deductive Explanations
  131. Some basic theorems of qualitative probability
  132. Match making: Assignments based on bilateral preferences
  133. Filtrations and the Finite Frame Property in Boolean Semantics
  134. Positionalist voting functions
  135. On the extensions of $S5$.
  136. Belief revision: An introduction
  137. Reasoning in Conceptual Spaces
  138. The negative Ramsey test: Another triviality result
  139. Relations between the logic of theory change and nonmonotonic logic
  140. 8. The Role of Cooperation in the Evolution of Protolanguage and Language
  141. BODILY FORCES, ACTIONS AND THE SEMANTICS OF VERBS
  142. Prospection as a cognitive precursor to symbolic communication