Search
Skip to Search Results- 12Concepts
- 5Brain damage--Patients--Rehabilitation
- 2Brain damage--Patients--Family relationships
- 2Cognition
- 2Husband and wife
- 2Interdisciplinarity
- 1Bower, Archibald C.
- 1Brigandt, Ingo
- 1Clark, Elaine Veronica.
- 1Ford, Penny.
- 1Gagliardi, Emilio
- 1Hiemstra, Dayna.
-
Spring 2010
Implicit concept mapping (iCmap; Aidman & Egan, 1998), measures: (1) the complexity of conceptual activation, and (2) the degree to which integration is internally consistent. These characteristics describe aspects of both Dual Code theory (DCT; Paivio,1986) and of lexical meaning (Johnson-Laird,...
-
2011
Interdisciplinary communication, and thus the rate of progress in scholarly understanding, would be greatly enhanced if scholars had access to a universal classification of documents or ideas not grounded in particular disciplines or cultures. Such a classification is feasible if complex concepts...
-
2010
Love, Alan C. , Brigandt, Ingo
Accounting for the evolutionary origins of morphological novelty is one of the core challenges of contemporary evolutionary biology. A successful explanatory framework requires the integration of different biological disciplines, but the relationships between developmental biology and standard...