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Bierschenk, Inger – 1987
In contrast to traditional linguistic analysis, a model based on the empirical agent is presented and tested. A text is regarded as an intentionally produced cognitive process. The analysis has to take the agent (perspective) into account to facilitate an adequate processing of its objectives (viewpoints). Moreover, the model is surface-oriented…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cross Cultural Studies, Linguistics, Models
Bierschenk, Bernhard; Bierschenk, Inger – 1986
The second of three articles on the ways in which people formulate their observations, this paper begins with a discussion of the assumptions underlying analytical and class-based models of cognition. The analytical approach to the measurement of cognition is found to be inappropriate because human cognition, and consequently language processing…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Concept Formation, Epistemology
Bierschenk, Bernhard; Bierschenk, Inger – 1986
This third of three articles on the ways in which people formulate their observations presents an analysis of the perspective or attitude dominating the discourse of an interview. The analysis is conducted according to a paradigm that views the speaker as the controller of discourse perspective. The relationships found in the analysis are…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Bierschenk, Bernhard; Bierschenk, Inger – 1985
The empirical study of knowledge representation is the focus of this paper, which observes that language as the cognitive instrument in the communication of phenomena must be capable of expressing relations of the observer-observation kind. The paper points out that this implies a coopeartive process at work in the production of a text, of which…
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Epistemology
Bierschenk, Bernhard; Bierschenk, Inger – 1986
The first of three articles on the ways in which people formulate their observations, this paper considers the basic assumptions of both syntactic and paradigmatic models of cognition and their applications in natural (i.e., human) and artificial (i.e., computer) information processing. The analysis begins with background information on the nature…
Descriptors: Artificial Languages, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis, Computer Oriented Programs