cognitive continuum
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

37
(FIVE YEARS 8)

H-INDEX

11
(FIVE YEARS 2)

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 03003
Author(s):  
Michel Léonard ◽  
Monica Drăgoicea

This paper introduces the Responsible Service logic to clarify the responsibilities of managers in the establishment of services inside society. Nowadays, managers have to foster the discovery of new Exploration and Innovation activities (E&I). Indeed, they have to address business and societal challenges with much more consistency and responsibility, as information technologies (IT) are being infused into the development of products and services. It is a question of exploring how to rendezvous responsible management and IT potential for value co-creation. This paper considers Service Science and its two disciplinary pillars – marketing (Service-Dominant logic), and information technology (Service-IT logic). Then it introduces a third pillar, the Responsible Service logic, to fill the gap between them and, in such a way, to reinforce a cognitive continuum between all these pillars. Thus, the Responsible Service logic will concern all the co-creators of the service, although they have different skills, activities, competencies, and even belong to different entities. This is how it clarifies the real responsibilities of the managers in such a progression.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Kyung Hwa Jo ◽  
Song Ok Kwon ◽  
Ji Won Han ◽  
Ki Woong Kim ◽  
Kyung Phil Kwak ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 190-198
Author(s):  
T. V. Kozlova ◽  

The article is devoted to synesthesia, its study from the point of view of psychology and neuropsychology, features of synesthetic perception and importance of synesthesia for deaf people. The author refers to the works of modern researchers of synesthesia in the field of psychology and neuropsychology and examines various types of synesthetic reactions and associations. Synesthesia researchers study this phenomenon comprehensively, in the sensoryperceptual- cognitive continuum. Synesthetic stimuli and reactions are related to perception and can be considered in terms of its emotional component. It is emphasized that synesthesia affects the individual’s memory, in particular, A. R. Luria, who investigated the phenomenon of synesthesia, believes that synesthetic sensations contribute to better memorization of information, especially perceived from hearing. A. R. Luria notes that at hearing perception of a word, its phonetic component remains on the last place, and the dominant meaning is semantic. In synesthesia, a brighter visual and auditory image is attached to the perception of meaning. When memorizing, the visual component of the image remains the leading one. For deaf people, the meaning itself, perceived with the help of sign language, is already assigned to the visual component. But this is not always a visual image. The author refers to the testimonies of deaf people, who describe their synesthetic experience, showing that the absence of hearing is not an obstacle to the perception of sound, which can be felt by other senses, touch and vision.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen Dicks ◽  
Lisa Vermunt ◽  
Wiesje M van der Flier ◽  
Frederik Barkhof ◽  
Philip Scheltens ◽  
...  

Abstract Biomarkers are needed to monitor disease progression in Alzheimer’s disease. Grey matter network measures have such potential, as they are related to amyloid aggregation in cognitively unimpaired individuals and to future cognitive decline in predementia Alzheimer’s disease. Here, we investigated how grey matter network measures evolve over time within individuals across the entire Alzheimer’s disease cognitive continuum and whether such changes relate to concurrent decline in cognition. We included 190 cognitively unimpaired, amyloid normal (controls) and 523 individuals with abnormal amyloid across the cognitive continuum (preclinical, prodromal, Alzheimer’s disease dementia) from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative and calculated single-subject grey matter network measures (median of five networks per individual over 2 years). We fitted linear mixed models to investigate how network measures changed over time and whether such changes were associated with concurrent changes in memory, language, attention/executive functioning and on the Mini-Mental State Examination. We further assessed whether associations were modified by baseline disease stage. We found that both cognitive functioning and network measures declined over time, with steeper rates of decline in more advanced disease stages. In all cognitive stages, decline in network measures was associated with concurrent decline on the Mini-Mental State Examination, with stronger effects for individuals closer to Alzheimer’s disease dementia. Decline in network measures was associated with concurrent cognitive decline in different cognitive domains depending on disease stage: In controls, decline in networks was associated with decline in memory and language functioning; preclinical Alzheimer’s disease showed associations of decline in networks with memory and attention/executive functioning; prodromal Alzheimer’s disease showed associations of decline in networks with cognitive decline in all domains; Alzheimer’s disease dementia showed associations of decline in networks with attention/executive functioning. Decline in grey matter network measures over time accelerated for more advanced disease stages and was related to concurrent cognitive decline across the entire Alzheimer’s disease cognitive continuum. These associations were disease stage dependent for the different cognitive domains, which reflected the respective cognitive stage. Our findings therefore suggest that grey matter measures are helpful to track disease progression in Alzheimer’s disease.


2019 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Moscoso ◽  
Jesús Silva-Rodríguez ◽  
Jose Manuel Aldrey ◽  
Julia Cortés ◽  
Anxo Fernández-Ferreiro ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Kylie A. Molinaro ◽  
Matthew L. Bolton

With the growing threat of phishing emails and the limited effectiveness of current mitigation approaches, there is an urgent need to better understand what leads to phishing victimization. There is a limited body of phishing research that identified cognitive automaticity as a potential factor, but more research on the relationship between user cognition and victimization is needed. Additionally, the current phishing research has not considered the characteristics of the environment in which phishing judgments are made. To fill these gaps, this work used the analysis capabilities afforded by the double system lens model (a judgment analysis technique) and the cognitive continuum theory, specifically the task continuum index and the cognitive continuum index. By calculating a task continuum index score, the cognition best suited for the email sorting task was identified. This calculation resulted in a value which indicated that more analytical cognition was most effective. The cognitive continuum index score evaluated the participants’s cognition level while making judgments. The relationships between these measures and achievement were evaluated. Results indicated that more analytical cognition was associated with lower rates of phishing victimization. This work provides a deeper insight into the phishing problem and has implications for combating phishing.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. P1086-P1087
Author(s):  
Li Lin ◽  
Yu Sun ◽  
Wenying Du ◽  
Xuanyu Li ◽  
Yang Zhan ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 252-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frédéric Dehais ◽  
Helen M. Hodgetts ◽  
Mickael Causse ◽  
Julia Behrend ◽  
Gautier Durantin ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Rababa

Pain in people with dementia (PWD) is underassessed and undertreated. Treatment of pain in people with dementia goes awry because of poor assessment, poor treatment, and factors related to nursing decision-making skills. Several theoretical models addressed the role of nurses’ critical thinking and decision-making skills in pain treatment, like the cognitive continuum theory (CCT) and the adaptive pain management (APT). Only the Response to Certainty of Pain (RCP) model was the first model to posit relationships between nurses' uncertainty, pain assessment, and patient outcomes. Gilmore-Bykovskyi and Bowers developed the RCP, which incorporates the concept of uncertainty and how it relates to the problem of unrelieved pain in PWD. The RCP model has the potential to provide good understanding of the problem of unrelieved pain in people with dementia. It also could help to develop a research study that brings comfort to an often neglected and vulnerable population.


2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel A. Aijón Oliva

Syntactic and discursive choices in context can constitute resources for the interactional profiling of the direct participants. This study analyzes the frequencies with which speakers index themselves, as well as the syntactic functions they preferably accord themselves when doing so, in a corpus of Spanish radio discourse where a range of textual genres and speaker socioprofessional identities are contemplated. The analysis is restricted to central syntactic functions, i.e. those with the capacity to establish agreement with the verb. A dichotomy is proposed between subject and (accusative or dative) object self-encoding, based on the different morphological means through which verbal agreement is carried out in this language, namely verbal endings and clitics. Both the statistical patterning of variation and the discursive-pragmatic motivations of particular choices are subsequently examined. The selection of a specific syntactic function for the encoding of the speaker is found to often serve communicative goals related to the textual genre and to the kinds of socio-professional identities speakers intend to develop within it. Significant correlations are obtained between higher percentages of self-encoding as subject and higher rates of discursive self-indexation altogether, although speakers presenting themselves as political representatives diverge from this tendency for particular communicative reasons. The results are interpreted as being parallel to a discursive-cognitive continuum between subjectivity and objectivity that underlies speaker interactional self-profiling and discourse construction.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document