Cognitive Science

As stated by Carnegie Mellon University, Cognitive Science is an interdisciplinary subject, encompassing: “philosophy, cognitive psychology, computer science, and neuroscience”[1]While the programme they describe is offered by the department of philosophy, suggesting that Cognitive Science might be a sub-topic of philosophy, it also encompasses psychology and Computer Science. Therefore it is not grouped as a sub-topic and is listed as a higher level topic.




[1] https://www.cmu.edu/dietrich/philosophy/research/areas/science-methodology/cognitive-science.html

Additional Related Publications:

  • [WebSci2009] Creese, Sadie, Lamberts, Koen - Can cognitive science help us make information risk more tangible online?
  • [WebSci2009] Carr, Leslie, Harnad, Stevan - Cognition, Cognitive Technology and the Web
  • [WebSci2013] Jared Lorince, Peter M. Todd - Can simple social copying heuristics explain tag popularity in a collaborative tagging system?
  • [WebSci2013] Harry Halpin - Does the Web Extend the Mind?
  • [WebSci2013] Gemma Fitzsimmons, Mark Weal, Denis Drieghe - On Measuring the Impact of Hyperlinks on Reading
  • [WebSci2010] Baumgartner, Robert, Fayzrakhmanov, Ruslan, Gattringer, Rafael, Göbel, Max, Holzinger, Wolfgang, Klein, David, Kruepl, Bernhard - Web 2.0 Vision for the Blind.
  • [WebSci2010] Halpin, Harry, Clark, Andy, Wheeler, Michael - Towards a Philosophy of the Web: Representation, Enaction, Collective Intelligence.
  • [WebSci2011] Alan Dix - A Shifting Boundary: the dynamics of internal cognition and the web as external representation.