The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of self-reflective consciousness

Author:   Herbert S. Terrace ,  Janet Metcalfe (both in the Department of Psychology, both in the Department of Psychology, Columbia University, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195161564


Pages:   392
Publication Date:   10 February 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of self-reflective consciousness


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Author:   Herbert S. Terrace ,  Janet Metcalfe (both in the Department of Psychology, both in the Department of Psychology, Columbia University, USA)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 16.30cm
Weight:   0.700kg
ISBN:  

9780195161564


ISBN 10:   0195161564
Pages:   392
Publication Date:   10 February 2005
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"1: Endel Tulving: Episodic memory and autonoesis: Uniquely human? 2: Janet Metcalfe and Hedy Kober: Self-reflective consciousness and the projectable self 3: Herbert S. Terrace: Metacognition and the evolution of language 4: Katherine Nelson: Emerging levels of consciousness in early human development 5: Marcel Kinsbourne: A continuum of self-consciousness that emerges in phylogeny and ontogeny 6: E. Tory Higgins: Humans as applied motivation scientists: Self-consciousness from ""Shared Reality"" and ""Becoming"" 7: Patricia Kitcher: Two normative roles for self-consciousness in modern philosophy 8: Bennett L. Schwartz: Progress in the study of chimpanzee recall and episodic memory 9: Bennett L. Schwartz: Do non-human primates have episodic memory 10: J. David Smith: Studies of uncertainty monitoring and metacognition in animals and humans 11: Robert R. Hampton: Can Rhesus monkeys discriminate between remembering and forgetting? 12: Lisa K. Son and Nate Kornell: Meta-confidence judgements in Rhesus Macaques: Explicit versus implicit mechanisms 13: Joseph Call: The self and other: A missing link in comparative social cognition"

Reviews

After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do. --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to any psychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them. --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques.. .essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness. --Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical and philosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground. --Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center.. .Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates. --John H. Flavell, Stanford University Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals. --Marc Hauser, Harvard University After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do. --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to any psychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them. --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques.. .essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness. --Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical and philosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground. --Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center.. .Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates. --John H. Flavell, Stanford University Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals. --Marc Hauser, Harvard University.. .admirably explores the cognitive dimensions of self-reflective consciousness...the individuals chapters are all of high quality...a useful volume for readers interested in a broad-ranging examination of this topic. --The Quarterly Review of Biology


After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do. --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences<br> remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to any psychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them. --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques<br> .,. essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness. --Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University<br> We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical andphilosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground. --Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center<br> .,. Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates. --John H. Flavell, Stanford University<br> Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals. --Marc Hauser, Harvard University<br> After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do. --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences<br> remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to anypsychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them. --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques<br> .,. essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness. --Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University<br> We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical and philosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground. --Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center<br> .,. Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates. --John H. Flavell, Stanford University<br> Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals. --Marc Hauser, Harvard University<br> .,. admirably explores the cognitive dimensions of self-reflective consciousness...the individuals chapters are all of high quality...a useful volume for readers interested in a broad-ranging examination of this topic. --The Quarterly Review of Biology<br>


"""After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do."" --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences ""remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to any psychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them."" --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques ""...essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness.""--Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University ""We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical and philosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground.""--Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center ""...Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates.""--John H. Flavell, Stanford University ""Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals.""--Marc Hauser, Harvard University ""After a century in the wilderness of questions considered unanswerable by science, the study of animal consciousness has undergone a revival in the last few decades. Research on consiousness in nonhumans has spawned several experimental paradigms, all of which are represented in this edited volume. The Missing Link in Cognition (the missing link being, as its subtitle suggests, the origin of self-reflective consiousness) stands as an excellent resource for advanced students and researchers interested in the state of the art in this rapidly growing field... greatly expands our understanding of the things nonhumans can and cannot do."" --TRENDS in Cognitive Sciences ""remarkable collection of essays by some of the most renowned scientists in the fields of cognitive psychology, development, animal learning, and primatology. No doubt because of the conference origins of the text, each chapter is written with full awareness of and integration with the topics in the other chapters. This is a very welcome if somewhat rare feature in edited volumes . . . This text would be an excellent addition to any psychologist's library. Only those with no interest in cognition, development, the conscious mind, animal behavior, evolutionary theory, or philosophy of science would fail to thoroughly enjoy this text. It is likely only accessible to graduate students and professionals, but it should be fascinating to all of them."" --Salavador Macias, in Psyccritiques ""...essential reading for anyone interested in the nature of self-awareness.""--Alan M. Leslie, Rutgers University ""We usually think that we are the only conscious beings, but after reading this collection of empirical and philosophical papers, this position becomes hard to maintain. There is plenty of common ground.""--Frans B. M. de Waal, Living Links Center ""...Particularly important and surprising are its reports of recent ingenious research showing something like metacognitive competencies in primates.""--John H. Flavell, Stanford University ""Just when you thought it was safe to proclaim our intellectual uniqueness and domination of the animal kingdom, along comes The Missing Link in Cognition, the latest challenge to our status as the paragon of animals.""--Marc Hauser, Harvard University ""...admirably explores the cognitive dimensions of self-reflective consciousness...the individuals chapters are all of high quality...a useful volume for readers interested in a broad-ranging examination of this topic.""--The Quarterly Review of Biology"


Author Information

Herbert S. Terrace obtained his Ph.D at Harvard University, where he was a student of B.F. Skinner. Partly as a result of Project Nim (an attempt to teach sign language to the chimpanzee Nim Chimpsky), his interests changed from behaviourism to animal cognition. Currently, he is investigating the ability of monkeys to remember arbitrary sequences and has provided extensive evidence that they can think about those sequences without language. Janet Metcalfe received her doctorate from the University of Toronto. Although she started her career as a computational modeler of human memory, having developed a composite holographic associative recall model (CHARM), she has, for many years, studied human metacognition. She has published extensively on the mechanisms underlying human metacognitive abilities, and the repercussions of these abilities. She has been an editor of several special issues on human metacognition including the popular volume Metacognition: Knowing about Knowing.

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