about
Exploring the automaticity of language-perception interactions: Effects of attention and awarenessNeuron-based heredity and human evolutionGlobal and local features of semantic networks: evidence from the Hebrew mental lexiconSearching for Category-Consistent Features: A Computational Approach to Understanding Visual Category Representation.Colour Association with Music Is Mediated by Emotion: Evidence from an Experiment Using a CIE Lab Interface and Interviews.Current Perspectives on Cognitive Diversity.A reappraisal of the uncanny valley: categorical perception or frequency-based sensitization?Thinking in circuits: toward neurobiological explanation in cognitive neuroscience.Language can boost otherwise unseen objects into visual awareness.Categorical encoding of color in the brainRepresentational shifts made visible: movement away from the prototype in memory for hue.Motion Event Similarity Judgments in One or Two Languages: An Exploration of Monolingual Speakers of English and Chinese vs. L2 Learners of English.Cross-cultural color-odor associations.Newly trained lexical categories produce lateralized categorical perception of colorThe biological basis of a universal constraint on color naming: cone contrasts and the two-way categorization of colors.Haptic categorical perception of shape.Cognition is … Fundamentally Cultural.Are temporal concepts embodied? A challenge for cognitive neuroscience.Electrophysiological evidence for the left-lateralized effect of language on preattentive categorical perception of color.Developmental Changes in the Profiles of Dyscalculia: An Explanation Based on a Double Exact-and-Approximate Number Representation Model.NICE: A Computational Solution to Close the Gap from Colour Perception to Colour CategorizationNot All Flavor Expertise Is Equal: The Language of Wine and Coffee Experts.Literacy shapes thought: the case of event representation in different culturesRight away: A late, right-lateralized category effect complements an early, left-lateralized category effect in visual search.The behavioral and neural effects of language on motion perception.Race and Color: Two Sides of One Story? Development of Biases in Categorical Perception.Variations in normal color vision. VI. Factors underlying individual differences in hue scaling and their implications for models of color appearance.How language shapes the cultural inheritance of categories.Color categories and color appearanceOne Label or Two? Linguistic Influences on the Similarity Judgment of Objects between English and Japanese SpeakersNaming influences 9-month-olds' identification of discrete categories along a perceptual continuum.Does grammatical aspect affect motion event cognition? A cross-linguistic comparison of English and Swedish speakers.Hue distinctiveness overrides category in determining performance in multiple object tracking.Language is not necessary for color categories.[Associative visual agnosia. The less visible consequences of a cerebral infarction].Speakers of different languages process the visual world differently.Why We Need Evolutionary Semantics
P2860
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P2860
description
2009 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2009 թուականի Օգոստոսին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
2009 թվականի օգոստոսին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
2009年の論文
@ja
2009年論文
@yue
2009年論文
@zh-hant
2009年論文
@zh-hk
2009年論文
@zh-mo
2009年論文
@zh-tw
2009年论文
@wuu
name
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@ast
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@en
type
label
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@ast
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@en
prefLabel
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@ast
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@en
P1476
Language, thought, and color: Whorf was half right.
@en
P2093
Terry Regier
P304
P356
10.1016/J.TICS.2009.07.001
P577
2009-08-27T00:00:00Z