Registers of Movement, Registers of Animacy Bibliography:

Registers of Movement, Registers of Animacy

Bibliography:

Becchio C et al. 2012. Social grasping: from mirroring to mentalizing. NeuroImage 61: 240–248.
Blanke O, Metzinger T. 2008. Full-body illusions and minimal phenomenal selfhood. Trends in Cognitive Sciences 13(1): 7–13.
De Bruin L, Van Elk M, Newen A. 2012. Reconceptualizing second-person interaction. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6: Article 151.
Di Paolo E, De Jaegher H. 2012. The interactive brain hypothesis. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6: Article 163.
Frith U, Frith C. 2010. The social brain: allowing humans to boldly go where no other species has been. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 365: 165–175.
Froese T, Fuchs T. 2012. The extended body: a case study in the neurophenomenology of social interaction. Phenomenology and Cognitive Science 11(2): 205–235.
Gapenne O. 2010. Kinesthesia and the construction of perceptual objects. Enaction: toward a new paradigm for cognitive science, ed. Stewart J, Gapenne O, Di Paolo E, 183–218. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Haraway D. 2007. When species meet. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Hattori Y et al. 2013. Spontaneous synchronized tapping to an auditory rhythm in a chimpanzee. Scientific Reports 3: Article 1566.
Hillier B. [1996] 2007. Space is the machine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hurley S. 2005. Making sense of animals. Rational animals?, ed Hurley S, Nudd M, 137–171. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Hurley S. 2008. The Shared Circuits Model (SCM): how control, mirroring, and simulation can enable imitation, deliberation, and mindreading. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31.1: 1–58.
Ingold T. 2000. The perception of the environment: essays on livelihood, dwelling and skill. London: Routledge.
Johnson M. 2007. The meaning of the body: aesthetics of human understanding. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Kuriyama S. 1999. The expressiveness of the body and the divergence of Greek and Chinese medicine. New York: Zone Books.
Manovich L. 2013. Visualizing Vertov. Availabe at http://lab.softwarestudies.com/2013/01/visualizing-vertov-new-article-by-lev.html
Mitchell L et al. 2013. The geography of happiness: connecting Twitter sentiment and expression, demographics, and objective characteristics of place. PLoS ONE 8(5): e64417. http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0064417
Noë A. 2004. Action in perception. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Picone M. 1991. Ombres japonaises : l’illusion dans les contes de revenants (1685–1989). L’Homme 31/117: 122–150.
Schmidt R, Richardson M. 2008. Dynamics of interpersonal coordination. Coordination: neural, behavioral and social dynamics, ed. Fuchs A, Jirsa V, 281–308. Berlin: Springer.
Shepard M, ed. 2008. Sentient city: ubiquitous computing, architecture, and the future of urban space. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Shockley K. 2012. Cross recurrence quantification of interpersonal postural activity. Tutorials in contemporary nonlinear methods for the behavioral sciences, ed. Riley M, Van Orden G. Washington, DC: National Science Foundation. http://www.nsf.gov/sbe/bcs/pac/nmbs/nmbs.pdf
Thompson E. 2007. Mind in life: biology, phenomenology, and the sciences of mind. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Tomasello M. 2008. Origins of human communication. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Tomasello M et al. 2005. Understanding and sharing intentions: the origins of cultural cognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28.5: 675–735.
Josh Berson is an anthropologist at the Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, Leipzig, and design epistemologist at LUSTLab, The Hague. His book Computable Bodies is under contract with Bloomsbury.

 

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