cognition 的定义
- the act or process of knowing; perception.
- the product of such a process; something thus known, perceived, etc.
- knowledge.
cognition 近义词
understanding
更多cognition例句
- If an AI system can excel here, it will have matched an important dimension of human cognition.
- You write that language is endlessly creative but also our cognition is constrained by the structure of language.
- This finding seems to sit nicely with the more socially oriented idea of “cultural cognition,” touted by Yale law and psychology scholar Dan Kahan.
- Human cognition is inseparable from the unconscious emotional responses that go with it.
- “Mushroom bodies are mostly responsible for learning and cognition,” Gill explains.
- Exercise improves not only physical fitness and health, but also mood and cognition.
- Thinking and cognition can be inhibited, with executive function demonstrating particularly notable challenges.
- He talks with doctors and scientists who study cognition, and cites a raft of research that bolsters his hypothesis.
- The more data these folks accumulated, the more automatic our higher cognition began to appear to them.
- Here are the four things cognizant people should know about the decade when computers mastered our cognition.
- The free play of the faculty of cognition which had been determined by Kant is also developed by Schiller.
- He brings another argument to prove that Cognition is not the same as true opinion.
- Both opinion, and cognition, consist in comparisons and computations made by the mind about the facts of sense.
- Second definition given by Theætêtus — That Cognition consists in right or true opinion.
- If the man catches what is really a non-cognition, he will not suppose it to be such, but to be a cognition.