Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication. / Tenbrink, Thora; Dylla, Frank.
In: Journal of Spatial Information Science, No. 15, 31.08.2017, p. 3-33.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

Tenbrink, T & Dylla, F 2017, 'Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication', Journal of Spatial Information Science, no. 15, pp. 3-33. <http://www.josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/350>

APA

Tenbrink, T., & Dylla, F. (2017). Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication. Journal of Spatial Information Science, (15), 3-33. http://www.josis.org/index.php/josis/article/view/350

CBE

Tenbrink T, Dylla F. 2017. Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication. Journal of Spatial Information Science. (15):3-33.

MLA

Tenbrink, Thora and Frank Dylla. "Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication". Journal of Spatial Information Science. 2017, (15). 3-33.

VancouverVancouver

Tenbrink T, Dylla F. Sailing: Cognition, Action, Communication. Journal of Spatial Information Science. 2017 Aug 31;(15):3-33.

Author

Tenbrink, Thora ; Dylla, Frank. / Sailing : Cognition, Action, Communication. In: Journal of Spatial Information Science. 2017 ; No. 15. pp. 3-33.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sailing

T2 - Cognition, Action, Communication

AU - Tenbrink, Thora

AU - Dylla, Frank

PY - 2017/8/31

Y1 - 2017/8/31

N2 - Sailing involves ways of thinking about space that are not normally required (or even acquired) in everyday life. Movement in this domain is based on a combination of external forces and internal (human) intentions that impose various kinds of directionality, affecting local action as well as global planning. Sailing terminology is spatial to a high extent, and involves a range of concepts that have received little attention in the spatial cognition literature. We explore the area by focusing on the core features of cognition, action, and communication, and suggest a range of promising future areas of research in this domain as a showcase of the fascinating flexibility of human spatial cognition.

AB - Sailing involves ways of thinking about space that are not normally required (or even acquired) in everyday life. Movement in this domain is based on a combination of external forces and internal (human) intentions that impose various kinds of directionality, affecting local action as well as global planning. Sailing terminology is spatial to a high extent, and involves a range of concepts that have received little attention in the spatial cognition literature. We explore the area by focusing on the core features of cognition, action, and communication, and suggest a range of promising future areas of research in this domain as a showcase of the fascinating flexibility of human spatial cognition.

KW - Navigation

KW - Planning

KW - Embodied Cognition

KW - Reference Frames

KW - Communication

KW - Concepts

KW - Complexity

M3 - Article

SP - 3

EP - 33

JO - Journal of Spatial Information Science

JF - Journal of Spatial Information Science

SN - 1948-660X

IS - 15

ER -