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Cognitive science is a multidisciplinary science concerned with
understanding and utilizing models of cognition. It has spawned a
great dealof research on applications such as expert systems and
intelligent tutoring systems, and has interacted closely with
psychological research. However, it is generally accepted that it
is difficult to apply cognitive-scientific models to medical
training and practice. This book is based on a NATO Advanced
Research Workshop held in Italy in 1991, the purpose of which was
to examine the impact ofmodels of cognition on medical training and
practice and to outline future research programmes relating
cognition and education, and in particular to consider the
potential impact of cognitive science on medical training and
practice. A major discovery presented in the book is that the
research areas related to artificial intelligence, cognitive
psychology, and medical decision making are considerably closer,
both conceptually and theoretically, than many of the workshop
participants originally thought.
First published in 1985, this book aims to develop an approach to
speech acts that has the virtue of being straight-forward,
explicit, formal and flexible enough to accommodate many of the
more general problems of interactive verbal communication. The
first chapter introduces situation semantics with the second
addressing the assumptions implied by the problem of representing
speaker intentionality. The third chapter presents a streamlined
theory of speech acts and the fourth tests the predictions of the
theory in several hypothetical discourse situations. A summary and
suggestions for further research is provided in chapter five, and
appendices facilitate reference to key concepts.
Cognitive science is a multidisciplinary science concerned with
understanding and utilizing models of cognition. It has spawned a
great dealof research on applications such as expert systems and
intelligent tutoring systems, and has interacted closely with
psychological research. However, it is generally accepted that it
is difficult to apply cognitive-scientific models to medical
training and practice. This book is based on a NATO Advanced
Research Workshop held in Italy in 1991, the purpose of which was
to examine the impact ofmodels of cognition on medical training and
practice and to outline future research programmes relating
cognition and education, and in particular to consider the
potential impact of cognitive science on medical training and
practice. A major discovery presented in the book is that the
research areas related to artificial intelligence, cognitive
psychology, and medical decision making are considerably closer,
both conceptually and theoretically, than many of the workshop
participants originally thought.
First published in 1985, this book aims to develop an approach to
speech acts that has the virtue of being straight-forward,
explicit, formal and flexible enough to accommodate many of the
more general problems of interactive verbal communication. The
first chapter introduces situation semantics with the second
addressing the assumptions implied by the problem of representing
speaker intentionality. The third chapter presents a streamlined
theory of speech acts and the fourth tests the predictions of the
theory in several hypothetical discourse situations. A summary and
suggestions for further research is provided in chapter five, and
appendices facilitate reference to key concepts.
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