1. Thinking and Reasoning: A Reader's Guide
Keith J. Holyoak and Robert G. Morrison
Part I: General Approaches to Thinking and Reasoning
2. Normative Systems: Logic, Probability, and Rational Choice
Nick Chater and Mike Oaksford
3. Bayesian Inference
Tom Griffiths, Josh Tenenbaum, and Charles Kemp
4. Knowledge Representation
Arthur B. Markman
5. Computational Modeling of Higher Cognition
Leonidas A. A. Doumas and John E. Hummel
6. Neural Substrate of Thinking
Robert G. Morrison and Barbara Knowlton
7. Mental Function as Genetic Expression: Emerging Insights from
Cognitive Neurogenetics
Adam E. Green and Kevin N. Dunbar
Part II: Deductive, Inductive and Abductive Reasoning
8. Dual-process Theories of Reasoning: Facts and fallacies
Jonathan St. B. T. Evans
9. Inference in Mental Models
P. N. Johnson-Laird
10. Similarity
Robert L. Goldstone, Ji Yun Son
11. Concepts and Categories: Memory, Meaning, and Metaphysics
Lance J. Rips, Edward E. Smith, and Douglas L. Medin
12. Causal Learning and Inference
Marc Buehner and Patricia W. Cheng
13. Analogy and Relational Reasoning
Keith J. Holyoak
14. Explanation and Abductive Inference
Tania Lombrozo
15. Rational Argument
Ulrike Hahn, Mike Oaksford
Part III. Judgment and Decision Making
16. Decision Making
Robyn A. LeBoeuf, Eldar Shafir
17. Judgment Heuristics
Dale Griffin
18. Cognitive Hierarchies and Emotions in Behavioral Game
Theory
Colin Camerer and Alec Smith
19. Moral Judgment
Michael Waldmann, Jonas Nagel, and Alex Wiegmann
20. Motivated Thinking
Daniel C. Molden and E. Tory Higgins
Part IV. Problem Solving, Intelligence, and Creative Thinking
21. Problem Solving
Miriam Bassok and Laura R. Novick
22. On the Distinction between Rationality and Intelligence:
Implications for Understanding Individual Differences in
Reasoning
Keith E. Stanovich
23. Cognition and the Creation of Ideas
Steve M. Smith and Tom B. Ward
24. Insight
J. Jason van Steenburgh, Jessica I. Fleck, Mark Beeman, and John
Kounios
25. Genius
Dean Keith Simonton
Part V. Ontogeny, Phylogeny, Language and Culture
26. Development of Thinking in Children
Susan A. Gelman and Brandy N. Frazier
27. The Human Enigma
Derek Penn and Dan Povinelli
28. Language and Thought
Lila Gleitman, Anna Papafragou
29. Thinking in Society and Culture
Tage Rai
Part VI. Modes of Thinking
30. Mathematical Cognition
John Opfer and Robert Siegler
31. Visuospatial Thinking
Mary Hegarty and Andrew T. Stull
32. Gesture in Thought
Susan Goldin-Meadow and Susan Wagner Cook
33. Impact of Aging on Thinking
Shannon McGillivray, Michael C. Friedman, and Alan D. Castel
34. The Cognitive Neuroscience of Thought Disorder in
Schizophrenia
Peter Bachman and Tyrone D. Cannon
Part VII. Thinking in Practice
35. Scientific Thinking and Reasoning
Kevin N. Dunbar and David Klahr
36. Legal Reasoning
Barbara A. Spellman and Fred Schauer
37. Thinking and Reasoning in Medicine
Vimla L. Patel, Jose F. Arocha, and Jiajie Zhang
38. Thinking in Business
Jeffrey Lowenstein
39. Musical Thought
William Forde Thompson and Paolo Ammirante
40. Learning to Think: Cognitive Mechanisms of Knowledge
Transfer
Ken Koedinger, Ido Roll
Keith J. Holyoak, Ph.D., is a Distinguished Professor of Psychology
at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Robert G. Morrison, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Psychology and
Neuroscience at Loyola University Chicago.
"This rich and complex book tackles the vagaries of the mind in a
neuroscientific framework, but it is not a survey or introductory
manual to be read casually. It requires an intense passion for
studying this area and in-depth understanding of the concepts to
truly reap its rewards." -- DOODY'S
"This is an excellent volume on the growing field of thinking and
reasoning, now a part of high-level human cognition which includes
creative thinking, decision making and problem solving. These have
of late become increasingly important areas of inquiry and
scientific research.
The better we understand ourselves and others, the happier are the
lives we can lead. The editors and contributors therefore deserve
to be applauded for this monumental work which contributes
immensely to understanding ourselves and our thoughts." --
BizIndia
"This comprehensive treatment of human thinking should be of value
to anyone who is
interested in human cognition and the many ways in which it can be
conceptualized,
modeled, and studied. Holyoak and Morrison in the Oxford Handbook
also provide
suggestions for organizing the chapters in the book for use as a
text for advanced
undergraduates (very advanced, I'd add) and graduate students. All
of these potential readers should find many issues worth thinking
about in the 836 pages of this book." -- PsycCRITIQUES
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