Taste in Two Tongues: A Southeast Asian Study of Semantic Convergence
In: The senses & society, Volume 6, Issue 1, p. 30-37
ISSN: 1745-8927
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In: The senses & society, Volume 6, Issue 1, p. 30-37
ISSN: 1745-8927
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- List of Figures -- List of Contributors -- Introduction: Human Sociality as a New Interdisciplinary Field -- Part 1: Properties of Human Interaction -- 1 On the Human "Interaction Engine -- 2 Interaction: The Infrastructure for Social Institutions, the Natural Ecological Niche for Language, and the Arena in which Culture is Enacted -- 3 Human Sociality as Mutual Orientation in a Rich Interactive Environment: Multimodal Utterances and Pointing in Aphasia -- 4 Social Actions, Social Commitments -- Part 2: Psychological Foundations -- 5 Infant Pointing at 12 Months: Communicative Goals, Motives, and Social-Cognitive Abilities -- 6 The Developmental Interdependence of Theory of Mind and Language -- 7 Constructing the Social Mind: Language and False-Belief Understanding -- 8 Sylvia's Recipe: The Role of Imitation and Pedagogy in the Transmission of Cultural Knowledge -- Part 3: Culture and Sociality -- 9 The Thought that Counts: Interactional Consequences of Variation in Cultural Theories of Meaning -- 10 Cultural Perspectives on Infant-Caregiver Interaction -- 11 Joint Commitment and Common Ground in a Ritual Event -- 12 Habits and Innovations: Designing Language for New, Technologically Mediated Sociality -- Part 4: Cognition in Interaction -- 13 Meeting Other Minds through Gesture: How Children Use their Hands to Reinvent Language and Distribute Cognition -- 14 The Distributed Cognition Perspective on Human Interaction -- 15 Social Consequences of Common Ground -- 16 Why a Deep Understanding of Cultural Evolution is Incompatible with Shallow Psychology -- Part 5: Evolutionary Perspectives -- 17 Culture and the Evolution of the Human Social Instincts -- 18 Parsing Behavior: A Mundane Origin for an Extraordinary Ability? -- 19 Why Don't Apes Point?.