In:Bi-Directionality in the Cognitive Sciences: Avenues, challenges, and limitations
Edited by Marcus Callies, Wolfram R. Keller and Astrid Lohöfer
[Human Cognitive Processing 30] 2011
► pp. v–vi
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Published online: 13 July 2011
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.30.toc
https://doi.org/10.1075/hcp.30.toc
Table of contents
Editors and contributors
Introduction. Bi-directionality: Avenues, challenges, and limitations
I. Avenues for bi-directionality
Genre between the humanities and the sciences
Culture-specific concepts of emotionality and rationality
Widening the goalposts of cognitive metaphor research
How novels feel: Emotional and rational reading processes in contemporary fiction
Cognitive poetics and the negotiation of knowledge
WRITING is medicine: Blending cognitive and corpus stylistics
II. Challenges to and limitations on bi-directionality
Collective aesthetics and the Mere Exposure Effect
Embodied mind and cross-cultural narrative patterns
The mind and the text / the mind in the text
Verbal irony in Shakespeare’s dramatic works
Invisible, visible, grammaticalization
How does the mind do literary work?
Cognitive science meets language pedagogy
The conceptualization of personality: Converging and diverging evidence
Cognitive linguistics as a cognitive science
Index
