Concepedia

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cognitive science

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Origins of Cognitive Science

1906 - 1929

The period from 1906 to 1929 saw cognitive inquiry converge on how minds map brain processes to behavior, with lesion and region-focused work linking motor and frontal systems to habit formation, retention, and learning efficiency. Perception, imagery, and attention were established as core cognitive operations, with cross-species findings showing mental imagery and visual attention underpinning reasoning, discrimination, and attentional control. Cognitive psychology emerged as a distinct theoretical-methodological program, balancing experimental psychology, cognitive science, and mind-theory debates; foundational questions about measurement, scope, and mechanisms framed the methodological trajectory. Contextual, affective, and social dimensions of cognition appeared through context effects on learning and recall, interpretation of facial expressions, and measures of pleasantness, underscoring emotion-cognition interactions and considerations of psychopathology. The converging themes reflect a move toward integrated accounts of cognition that seek to relate mental representations to brain-mediated processes while remaining responsive to real-world contexts.

Brain-behavior mapping of learning emerges through lesion and region-specific studies, linking motor/frontal areas and cerebral mass to habit formation, retention, and learning efficiency across 1910–1926 [1], [3], [4], [8], [10], [14].

Perception, imagery, and attention constitute core cognitive operations validated across species: mental imagery, visual attention, and vision in mice underpin reasoning, discrimination, and attentional control [5], [6], [7], [9].

Cognitive psychology emerges as a distinct theoretical-methodological program in these works, balancing experimental psychology, cognitive science, and mind theory; foundational texts and debates frame measurement, psychology's scope, and mind mechanisms [2], [16], [17], [18], [19].

Contextual, affective, and social dimensions of cognition appear via context effects on learning and recall, facial expression interpretation, and pleasantness responses, highlighting emotion-cognition interactions and psychopathology appraisals [11], [13], [15], [20].

Cybernetic Cognition

1930 - 1959

Neural-Cognitive Mapping

1960 - 1979

Distributed Neurocognitive Architecture

1980 - 1986

Embodied and Situated Cognition

1987 - 1993

Executive Control Networks

1994 - 2007

Network Neuroscience of Cognition

2008 - 2014

Self-Supervised End-to-End Vision

2015 - 2024