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Abstract
The last decade has witnessed a sophistication and proliferation in the number of studies focused on the evolution of human cognition, reflecting a renewed interest in the evolution of the human mind in anthropology and in many other disciplines. The complexity and enormity of this topic requires the coordinated efforts of many researchers. This volume brings together the disciplines of palaeontology, psychology, anatomy, and primatology. Together, they address a number of issues, including the evolution of sex differences in spatial cognition, the role of archaeology in the cognitive sciences, the relationships between brain size, cranial reorganization and hominid cognition, and the role of language and information processing in human evolution.
April Nowell is Professor and Chair of Anthropology at University of Victoria. She holds a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
In the Mind's Eye | i | ||
Copyright | ii | ||
Table of Contents | iii | ||
List of Contributors | iv | ||
Forward: The Archaeology of Intelligence | vii | ||
Acknowledgements | xiii | ||
Introduction | 1 | ||
Chapter 1. The Role of Archaeology in Cognitive Science | 9 | ||
Chapter 2. The Re-Emergence of Cognitive Archaeology | 20 | ||
Chapter 3. Memories Out of Mind | 33 | ||
Chapter 4. A Pragmatic View of the Emergence of Paleolithic Symbol-Using | 50 | ||
Chapter 5. Nonmaterial Artifacts | 63 | ||
Chapter 6. Archaeological Implications of Paleoneurology | 83 | ||
Chapter 7. Intellectual Surplusage | 97 | ||
Chapter 8. Before or After the Split? | 107 | ||
Chapter 9. Multilevel Information Processing, Archaeology, and Evolution | 121 | ||
Chapter 10. Behavioral Response to Variable Pleistocene Landscapes | 137 | ||
Chapter 11. The Fossil Evidence for the Evolution of Human Intelligences in Pleistocene Homo | 154 | ||
Chapter 12. On the Neural Bases of Spoken Language | 172 | ||
Chapter 13. Discovering the Symbolic Potential of Communicative Signs | 187 |