Cognitive philology
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cognitive philology is the science that studies written and oral texts, considering them as results of human mental processes. This science, therefore, compares the results of textual science with those results of experimental research of both psychological field and artificial intelligence production systems. This discipline precisely,
- deals with transmission modalities of written and textes, and processes through which different knowledges are classified, availing itself, firstly, of the information theory
- studies the narrative subject, especially regarding its selecting nature
- examines the developing function of rhythm and metre and the pertinence of the semantic association during processing the cognitive maps
- finally, it provides the scientific ground for the realization of critical multimedial editions.
Among the founding fathers and the student of this matter: Gilles Fauconnier, Alan Richardson and Mark Turner in the USA; Benoît de Cornulier and François Recanati in France; David Herman and Manfred Jahn in Germany; Paolo Canettieri, Domenico Fiormonte, Anatole Pierre Fuksas and Luca Nobile in Italy; Julián Santano Moreno in Spain.
[edit] See also
- Cognitive linguistics
- Philology
- Information Theory
- Cognitive Psychology
- Cognitive Poetics
- Artificial Intelligence