- re-cognition
- \\|rē+\ noun
Etymology: re- + cognition: a second cognition : a knowing usually without conscious identification of something that has been known before
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Useful english dictionary. 2012.
Cognition située — Cognition Psychologie Approches et courants Psychodynamique • Humanisme • … Wikipédia en Français
Cognition située et incarnée — Cognition Psychologie Approches et courants Psychodynamique • Humanisme • … Wikipédia en Français
Cognition Sociale — La cognition sociale désigne l ensemble des processus cognitifs (perception, mémorisation, raisonnement, émotions...) impliqués dans les interactions sociales chez l homme mais aussi chez les animaux sociaux, en particulier primates. Sommaire 1… … Wikipédia en Français
cognition — [ kɔgnisjɔ̃ ] n. f. • XIVe; lat. cognitio 1 ♦ Philos. Connaissance. 2 ♦ Physiol. Processus par lequel un organisme acquiert la conscience des événements et objets de son environnement. ● cognition nom féminin (latin cognitio, onis) Dans la… … Encyclopédie Universelle
Cognition in Cats — – how much they retain memory – may differ significantly depending on several factors. Relationships with humans, individual intelligence, and even the age of the cat may affect memory. Taken as a whole, cats have excellent memories. Recent… … Wikipedia
Cognition — Cog*ni tion, n. [L. cognitio, fr. cognoscere, cognitum, to become acquainted with, to know; co + noscere, gnoscere, to get a knowledge of. See {Know}, v. t.] 1. The act of knowing; knowledge; perception. [1913 Webster] I will not be myself nor… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Cognition — Cognition, im röm. Gerichtswesen richterliche Untersuchung u. Erkenntniß besonders in außerordentlichen Fällen (cognitio extraordinaria); daher cognosciren, richterlich untersuchen, erkennen … Herders Conversations-Lexikon
cognition — I noun acquaintance, apperception, appreciation, apprehension, awareness, cognitio, cognitive process, cognizance, comprehension, conception, consciousness, discernment, enlightenment, familiarity, grasp, illumination, insight, intellection, ken … Law dictionary
cognition — cognition, cognitive The process of knowing (thinking), sometimes distinguished from affect (emotion) and conation or volition (striving), in a triad of mental processes. Cognitive psychology, which focuses on the use and handling of information… … Dictionary of sociology
cognition — mid 15c., ability to comprehend, from L. cognitionem (nom. cognitio) a getting to know, acquaintance, knowledge, noun of action from pp. stem of cognoscere (see COGNIZANCE (Cf. cognizance)) … Etymology dictionary
cognition — ► NOUN ▪ the mental acquisition of knowledge through thought, experience, and the senses. DERIVATIVES cognitional adjective. ORIGIN Latin, from cognoscere get to know … English terms dictionary