cognition

listen to the pronunciation of cognition
Английский Язык - Английский Язык
The process of knowing
A result of a cognitive process
{n} knowledge, conviction, trial
knowing, awareness, perception
The process of receiving, processing, storing, and using information
That which is known
The process of acquiring knowledge, including perception, intuition, and reasoning
the psychological result of perception and learning and reasoning
High level functions carried out by the human brain, including comprehension and use of speech, visual perception and construction, calculation ability, attention (information processing), memory, and executive functions such as planning, problem-solving, and self-monitoring
The process of knowing by thinking, comprehending, analyzing or evaluating Examples: Students use cognition to gain meaning from spoken or written material by reasoning, making inferences, seeing relationships, etc
Thinking skills that include perception, memory, awareness, reasoning, judgment, intellect, and imagination
The act of knowing; knowledge; perception
-mental activities such as thinking, memory, perception, judgment, and learning
The act or process of knowing in the broadest sense; specifically, an intellectual process by which knowledge is gained from perception or ideas
higher intellectual functioning including awareness, perception, reasoning, memory, and problem solving
The mental act, process or product of such act or process of knowing, learning, perceiving or of becoming aware HA 647
The conscious process of knowing or being aware of thoughts or perceptions, including understanding and reasoning
Pertaining to the mental processes that include knowing, thinking, learning, judging, and problem solving
Awareness; ability to think methodically
Mental activity including the capacity to know, comprehend, understand, reason, and remember (See mental representation; phylogenetic model)
The conscious process of the mind by which one becomes aware of thoughts and perceptions, including all aspects of perceiving, thinking, and remembering
Cognition is the mental process involved in knowing, learning, and understanding things. processes of perception and cognition. the process of knowing, understanding, and learning something (cognitio, from cognoscere , from co- ( CO-) + gnoscere ). Act or process of knowing. Cognition includes every mental process that may be described as an experience of knowing (including perceiving, recognizing, conceiving, and reasoning), as distinguished from an experience of feeling or of willing. Philosophers have long been interested in the relationship between the knowing mind and external reality; psychologists took up the study of cognition in the 20th century. See also cognitive psychology; cognitive science; philosophy of mind
Mental processes characterized by knowing, thinking, learning and judging [Quick find]
The process of knowing by thinking, comprehending, analyzing, or evaluation Examples: Students use the cognitive process to be able to understand or gain meaning from spoken or written material by reasoning, making inferences, seeing relationships, etc
the consciously or sub-consciously comprehended senses; a comprehension of subjectivity
Knowledge Understanding Faculty of understanding things, compare them, make judgements, and deductions
A generic term involving perceiving, recognizing, conceiving, judging, sensing, reasoning, remembering, and imagining
The process of knowing; of being aware of thoughts The ability to reason and understand
The act or process of knowing; perception O-O technology is intricately tied to how people think, act and interact while accomplishing work
Knowing specifically, the process, or result, of recognising, conceiving, judging and reasoning (Association for Children with Learning Difficulties, 1998)
mental functions such as the ability to think, reason, and remember
{i} awareness, perception
a new realization of life Cognitions result in higher degrees of awareness and consequently greater abilities to succeed with one’s endeavors in life
cog
implicit cognition
knowledge or information, whether from perception or memory, that clearly influences a person's behaviour, without their conscious awareness the information or that they know it
self cognition
The cognition of one's own self
cognition
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