Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 What is computational cultural psychology?
- 2 The digital psychologist: information technology and cultural psychology
- 3 Why don’t primates have God? Language and the abstraction of thought
- 4 Lost in translation: how to use automatic translation machines for understanding “otherness”
- 5 Spies and metaphors: automatic identification of metaphors for strategic intelligence
- 6 Scent of a woman: the mediation of smell and automatic analysis of extended senses
- 7 Dolly Parton’s love lexicon: detection of motifs in cultural texts
- 8 The relational matrix of the I
- 9 Identifying themes: from the Wingfield family to Harry and Sally
- 10 Eating and dining: studying the dynamics of dinner
- 11 Getting even: the cultural psychology of revenge and what computers can do about it
- Epilogue: on generals and mail coach drivers
- Bibliography
- Author index
- Subject index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2014
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Figures
- List of Tables
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1 What is computational cultural psychology?
- 2 The digital psychologist: information technology and cultural psychology
- 3 Why don’t primates have God? Language and the abstraction of thought
- 4 Lost in translation: how to use automatic translation machines for understanding “otherness”
- 5 Spies and metaphors: automatic identification of metaphors for strategic intelligence
- 6 Scent of a woman: the mediation of smell and automatic analysis of extended senses
- 7 Dolly Parton’s love lexicon: detection of motifs in cultural texts
- 8 The relational matrix of the I
- 9 Identifying themes: from the Wingfield family to Harry and Sally
- 10 Eating and dining: studying the dynamics of dinner
- 11 Getting even: the cultural psychology of revenge and what computers can do about it
- Epilogue: on generals and mail coach drivers
- Bibliography
- Author index
- Subject index
Summary
Preface
For Lord Byron, who was an adventurer and probably a thrill seeker, the pleasure in the “pathless woods” may have been the result of the thrill associated with the uncertainty, promise, and danger of traveling in an unknown territory. I am neither an adventurer nor a thrill seeker. However, from a very young age, I have found great pleasure in traveling the pathless woods of knowledge. A kind of a wimpy adventurer, you may call me. These travels have led me to very varied territories of human knowledge, from experimental psychology (Neuman and Weitzman 2003) and psychoanalysis (Neuman 2009a) to mathematical modeling (Neuman et al. 2012); from theoretical biology (Neuman 2008) to semiotics (Neuman 2009b); and from discourse analysis (Neuman et al. 2001) to innovative information technologies (Neuman et al. 2013b). What is interpreted by some of my colleagues as a symptom of an academic multiple personality disorder is for me a natural and legitimate expression of a deep intellectual passion.
Knowledge is not naturally demarcated by borders, and wherever borders exist in our minds they indicate our tendency to force order in a simplistic way and to follow the social power relations of academic politics. Physicists who study the semantic networks of language are not linguists, but their contribution to our understanding of human language is indispensable. Should this work be appreciated despite the fact that it transcends disciplinary boundaries? My answer is: yes!
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- Information
- Introduction to Computational Cultural Psychology , pp. xiii - xivPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2014