Connectionists: Second Call for Papers: Cognitive Social Sciences---Grounding the Social Sciences in the Cognitive Sciences?
Professor Ron Sun
rsun at rpi.edu
Mon Jan 11 21:41:32 EST 2010
The workshop on
Cognitive Social Sciences---Grounding the Social Sciences in the
Cognitive Sciences?
http://www.cogsci.rpi.edu/~rsun/wsp2010
(to be held at CogSci 2010 in Portland, Oregon, on August 11, 2010)
This workshop is aimed at exploring the cognitive (psychological)
basis of the social sciences and the possibilities of grounding the
social sciences in cognition (psychology).
Cognitive sciences have made tremendous strides in recent decades. In
particular, computational cognitive modeling (i.e., computational
psychology; Sun, 2008; Thagard, 1996) has changed the ways in which
cognition/psychology is explored and understood in many profound
respects. There have been many models of cognition/psychology proposed
in the cognitive sciences (broadly defined), leading to detailed
understanding of many cognitive/psychological domains and
functionalities. Empirical psychological research has also progressed
to provide us with much better understanding of many psychological
phenomena.
Given the advances in the cognitive sciences, can we leverage the
successes for the sake of better understanding social processes and
phenomena? More fundamentally, can the cognitive sciences (including
experimental cognitive psychology, computational psychology, social-
personality psychology, developmental psychology, cultural
psychology, psycholinguistics, philosophy of mind, cognitive
neuroscience, and so on) provide a better foundation for important
disciplines of the social sciences (sociology, anthropology,
economics, political science, ethics, as well as some "humanity"
fields: religious studies, history, legal studies, literary studies,
communication, and so on)?
Thus far, although very much a neglected topic, there nevertheless
have been various efforts at exploring this topic. Some of the efforts
were computationally motivated (see, e.g., Sun, 2006: "Cognition and
multi-agent interaction", published by Cambridge University Press).
Some other efforts are more empirical or theoretical in nature (see,
e.g., Turner, 2001: "Cognitive Dimensions of Social Science",
published by Oxford University Press).
There are both theoretical and practical rationales for developing
"cognitive social sciences" (see Turner, 2001; Sun, 2006; DiMaggio,
1997; Tetlock and Goldgeier, 2000; Camerer, 2003). We contend that the
social sciences may find their future in the cognitive sciences (at
least in part), which may well lead to a powerful and productive
combined intellectual enterprise. This combination or grounding may
provide the social sciences with imaginative scientific research
programs, hybridization/integration, new syntheses, novel paradigms/
frameworks, and so on, besides providing the cognitive sciences with
new data sources and problems to address.
The presentation and discussion at this workshop may lead to a
collection of major work in the form of a well edited book or a
special issue.
Confirmed keynote speakers:
Pascal Boyer
Paul Thagard
Mark Turner
Submission:
For regular oral presentation, please submit a paper of 3-8 pages, in
the usual CogSci conference format (as specified at: http://www.cogsci.rpi.edu/~rsun/wsp2010
). Please email the submission to: rsun at rpi dot edu
For short oral or poster presentation, please submit an extended
abstract of 1 page, in the usual CogSci conference format (as
specified at: http://www.cogsci.rpi.edu/~rsun/wsp2010 ). Please email
the submission to: rsun at rpi dot edu
Submission Deadline:
February 15, 2010
Workshop Chair:
Ron Sun
Workshop Program Committee:
Ron Sun
Philip Tetlock
Paul Thagard
Paul Bello
Jun Zhang
References:
Camerer, C. (2003). Behavioral Game Theory: Experiments on Strategic
Interaction. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
DiMaggio, P. (1997). Culture and cognition. Annual Review of
Sociology 23, 263-288.
Sun, R. (2006). Cognition and Multi-Agent Interaction: From Cognitive
Mdoeling to Social Simulation. Cambridge University Press, New York.
2006.
Sun, R. (ed.), (2008). The Cambridge Handbook of Computational
Psychology. Cambridge University Press, New York. 2008.
Tetlock, P. and Goldgeier, J. (2000). Human nature and world
politics: Cognition, identity, and influence. International Journal of
Psychology. 35 (2), 87-96.
Thagard, P. (1996). Mind: Introduction to Cognitive Science. MIT
Press, Cambridge, MA. 1996.
Thagard, P. (2006). Hot thought: Mechanisms and Applications of
Emotional Cognition. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Turner, M. (2001). Cognitive Dimensions of Social Science. Oxford
University Press.
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