2021
DOI: 10.3819/ccbr.2021.160003
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It's Hard to Be Social Alone: Cognitive Complexity as Transfer Within and Across Domains

Abstract: The field of comparative cognition is intent on demarcating cognition into social and physical domains; however, we argue that it is not useful to differentiate between cognitive processes involving social versus physical (nonsocial) phenomena. We argue that similar cognitive mechanisms underly reasoning about social and physical information and that it is transfer of knowledge and skills within and across these "domains" that is most informative with regard to identifying cognitive flexibility. We argue that … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Elsewhere, my colleagues and I have discussed the potentially misleading dichotomization of various cognitive processes, such as associative learning versus representational processes (Vonk & Edge, in press; see also Beckers et al, 2016; Hanus, 2016), social versus physical domains of cognition (Vonk et al, 2021), and of field versus laboratory approaches to the study of behavior (Vonk, in press; Vonk & Shackelford, 2012). Here, I will focus on the unproductive distinction between qualitative and quantitative differences when comparing nonhuman cognition to human cognition and between so-called “positive” versus “negative” results, which stem from a focus on “what” (outcome) questions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Elsewhere, my colleagues and I have discussed the potentially misleading dichotomization of various cognitive processes, such as associative learning versus representational processes (Vonk & Edge, in press; see also Beckers et al, 2016; Hanus, 2016), social versus physical domains of cognition (Vonk et al, 2021), and of field versus laboratory approaches to the study of behavior (Vonk, in press; Vonk & Shackelford, 2012). Here, I will focus on the unproductive distinction between qualitative and quantitative differences when comparing nonhuman cognition to human cognition and between so-called “positive” versus “negative” results, which stem from a focus on “what” (outcome) questions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%