Spatial cognition is a branch of cognitive psychology that studies how people acquire and use knowledge about their environment to determine where they are, how to obtain resources, and how to find their way home. Researchers from a wide range of disciplines, including neuroscience, cognition, and sociology, have discovered a great deal about how humans and other animals sense, interpret, behave in, and communicate about space. This book addresses some of the most important dimensions of spatial cognition, such as neurology, perception, memory, and language. It provides a broad yet detailed overview that is useful not only to academics, practitioners, and advanced students of psychology, but also to city planners, architects, software designers, sociologists, and anyone else who seeks to understand how we perceive, interpret, and interact with the world around us.
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This book, which provides a detailed interdisciplinary overview of spatial cognition from neurological to sociocultural levels, is an accessible resource for advanced undergraduates and graduate students, as well as researchers at all levels who seek to understand our perceptions of the world around us.
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ContributorsPrefaceIntroduction: Frameworks for Understanding Spatial Thought (or Wrapping Our Heads Around Space) David Waller and Lynn NadelI. Neuroscientific Dimensions of Spatial CognitionHippocampus and Related Areas: What the Place Cell Literature Tells Us About Cognitive Maps in Rats and Humans A. David Redish and Arne EkstromParietal Contributions to Spatial Cognition Raymond P. Kesner and Sarah H. Creem-RegehrII. Online Systems: Acquisition and Maintenance of Spatial InformationSpatial Perception and Action Brett R. Fajen and Flip PhillipsMultisensory Contributions to Spatial Perception Betty J. Mohler, Massimiliano Di Luca, and Heinrich H. BülthoffPerception of Spatial Relations During Self-Motion John W. Philbeck and Jesse SargentIndividual and Group Differences in Spatial Ability Beth M. CaseyIII. Offline Systems: Encoding, Storage, and Retrieval of Spatial InformationSpatial Memory: Place Learning, Piloting, and Route Knowledge Ken Cheng and Paul GrahamCognitive Maps Lynn NadelSpatial Memory: Properties and Organization Timothy P. McNamaraThe Development of Location Coding: An Adaptive Combination Account Mark P. Holden and Nora S. NewcombeModels of Spatial Cognition Stephen C. HirtleIV. Interpersonal Dimensions of Spatial CognitionI Go Right, North, and Over: Processing Spatial Language Holly A. Taylor and Tad T. BrunyéFunctions and Applications of Spatial Cognition Daniel R. Montello and Martin RaubalWayfinding, Navigation, and Environmental Cognition From a Naturalist's Stance Harry HeftIndexAbout the Editors
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781433812040
Publisert
2012-10-15
Utgiver
Vendor
American Psychological Association
Høyde
279 mm
Bredde
216 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
309

Om bidragsyterne

David Waller, PhD, is an associate professor of psychology at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. His research seeks to understand all aspects of spatial functioning in people, including the ability to keep track of where things are in one's immediate environment, navigate between places, and remember spatial information. In addition to traditional laboratory experiments and correlational studies, his research has been at the leading edge of using real-time 3-D computer graphics as a tool for investigating environmental cognition.
 
Dr. Waller is cofounder and codirector of the world's largest immersive virtual environment facility (the HIVE) and is an associate editor for Memory & Cognition, the American Journal of Psychology, and Presence: Teleoperators and Virtual Environments.
 
In his personal life, he is an ardent and zealous orienteer as well as a trail runner, pet owner, and gardener.
 
Lynn Nadel, PhD, is currently Regents Professor of Psychology and director of the Cognition and Neural Systems Program at the University of Arizona. His research, published in over 175 journal articles, chapters, and books, has been supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health, National Science Foundation, Eunice Kennedy Schriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, and several private foundations.
 
His work has focused on the functions of the hippocampus in memory and spatial cognition, leading to contributions in the study of stress and memory, sleep and memory, memory reconsolidation, and the mental retardation observed in Down syndrome. He has promulgated, with collaborators, two highly influential theories in cognitive neuroscience: the cognitive map theory of hippocampal function and the multiple trace theory of memory.
 
Dr. Nadel serves as the editor-in-chief of WIREs Interdisciplinary Reviews in Cognitive Science and is on the editorial boards of numerous journals in cognition and neural science. He was the corecipient in 2005 of the Grawemeyer Prize in Psychology, and he received the National Down Syndrome Society's Award for Research (2006).
 
He is a Fellow of the American Psychological Society, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Society of Experimental Psychologists.