This seems an offshoot of embodied emotion (see Niedenthal, et al. (2007), 
Embodying emotion.  Science, 316, 1002-1005).

Paul
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Beth Benoit 
  To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS) 
  Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 11:03 AM
  Subject: [tips] Embodied cognition




  Always a little skeptical of the "newest in psychology," I came across this 
article on the front page of the Boston Globe's Ideas section on Sunday:
  
http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2008/01/13/dont_just_stand_there_think/

  It's about "embodied cognition" and claims that "a growing body of new 
research suggests" that physical movement is linked to cognition in a variety 
of ways.  For example, "...a study...found that subjcts (all non-Chinese 
speakers) shown a series of Chinese ideographs while either pushing down or 
pulling up on a table in front of them will say they prefer the ideographs they 
saw when pulling upward over the ones they saw while pushing downward."  An 
interesting thought, but I can't help but wonder if it's just the newest fad. 
(Should I be jumping up and down while writing that?) 

  A search of the literature turned up 92 articles on "embodied cognition."  
Many seemed a bit obscure, such as: 
  An embodied cognitive analysis of social situativity.  Clark, Kevin Michael; 
Dissertation Abstracts International Section A: Humanities and Social Sciences, 
Vol 66(2-A), 2005. pp. 486.  And 
  At the root of embodied cognition: Cognitive science meets neurophysiology.  
Garbarini, Francesca; Adenzato, Mauro; Brain and Cognition, Vol 56(1), Oct 
2004. pp. 100-106. [Journal Article]

  There were also several that were skeptical of the whole thing.  None of the 
textbooks I use for Human Development, Child Psychology or Social Psychology 
include the concept, but I don't teach a brain or cognition course, so perhaps 
they do include this. 

  Anybody have any insight into this topic?

  Beth Benoit
  Granite State College
  Plymouth State University
  New Hampshire
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