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The Temporality of Situated Cognition.

David H V Vogel, Mathis Jording, Christian Kupke, Kai Vogeley

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2020 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.546212 via PubMed

Summary

Cognition is not only shaped by space but also by time, operating on two interconnected layers: a microlayer of brief neural processes enabling perception and action, and a macrolayer of lived experiences and personal narratives. These layers are dynamically linked, with the microlayer providing the foundation for the broader temporal horizons of the macrolayer. Cognition is a continuous process of transitioning between situated states, driven by the flow of time. Examples from everyday life and psychopathology illustrate how understanding cognition as enduring within time enriches the 4E (embodied, enactive, extended, embedded) framework.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding Cognition is fundamentally temporal, operating on microlayers and macrolayers of time that together constitute the enduring situatedness of cognitive processes.

Abstract

Situated cognition embeds perceptions, thoughts, and behavior within the contextual framework of so-called "4E cognition" understanding cognition to be embodied, enactive, extended, and embedded. Whereas this definition is primarily based on the spatial properties of a situation, it neglects a fundamental constituent: the cognitive situation as enduring. On a subpersonal level, situated cognition requires the integration of information processing within a minimal temporal extension generating the basic building blocks of perception and action ("microlayer" of time). On a personal level, lived situations and experienced narratives leading to our biography can be defined by their broader temporal horizons ("macrolayer" of time). The macrolayer of time is based on and emerges from information processing on the microlayer of time. Whereas the constraints on the microlayer are primarily defined by the integrity of neurobiological processes within an individual cognitive system, the temporal horizons and subsequently the situational context on the macrolayer are defined by the complex affordances of a situation on a personal or interpersonal level. On both time layers, cognition can be defined as a continuous dynamic process, reflecting the transition from one situated state to another. Taken together, the events forming the delimiting horizons of these situations correspond to the temporal structure of the cognitive process along which it continuously proceeds. The dynamic driving and enabling this transition from state to state is synonymous with the inherent flow of time. Just as the layers of time, flow and structure, are inseparably connected. The integration of temporal flow and temporal structure into the continuous dynamic process constitutes the enduring situatedness of cognition. By providing everyday examples and examples from psychopathology, we highlight the benefits of understanding cognitive processes as part of enduring situations.

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