Returning to a New Home
نویسنده
چکیده
This issue of Cognitive Science marks the start of our partnership with Lawrence Erlbaum Associates (LEA). The journal has never been published by LEA before, but in many ways, our relocation feels like a homecoming. In 1976 Roger Schank approached Larry Erlbaum with the idea of forming a cognitive science journal. Mr. Erlbaum was highly receptive, and together with his partner Walter Johnson began publishing Cognitive Science in 1977 at the newly established Ablex Publishing Company. The first editors were Eugene Charniak, Allan Collins, and Roger Schank. The first Cognitive Science Society conference was chaired by Donald Norman at University of California, San Diego in 1978. In the intervening years, LEA has published the Annual Proceedings of the Cognitive Science Conference. Beyond this, LEA has been a major force for the advancement of cognitive science through the impressive collection of books and journals they have published in cognitive science. We are honored and delighted to be working with LEA. Lawrence Erlbaum, both the man and the company, has been exceptionally generous with their time, expertise, and support. Indeed, his contributions to cognitive science have been recognized twice by the Cognitive Science Society, as two independent governing boards have made him an honorary member of the society. He is the only two-lifetime member of the society, but this is fitting in light of his redoubled efforts to promote cognitive science. We have every expectation that the journal will flourish with LEA. Through resources provided by LEA, the Cognitive Science Society will be able to significantly grow, offering its members new services for reasonable dues. LEA is also committed to the timely production of issues, Cognitive Science Society’s continued retention of copyrights, authors’ right to disseminate their articles on their own Web sites, and continued growth of the journal. Even though our publisher has changed, our central mission has not. Our aim is to provide an outlet for significant developments in the study of minds and other intelligent systems. This mission inherently involves interdisciplinary collaboration, and so we will continue our efforts to serve as a home to research that spans anthropology, computer science, education, linguistics, Cognitive Science 29 (2005) 1–4 Copyright © 2005 Cognitive Science Society, Inc. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Return migration and reintegration challenges: lived experience of expert returnees via Iranian universities
With the expansion and diversification of the process of international displacement as a factor affecting the national development of countries, the arena of migration studies needs to be reconsidered. The rising trend of external migration in recent years has been identified as one of the challenges in the policy area and requires comprehensive pathology. This study was conducted to understand...
متن کاملGender, turning points, and boomerangs: returning home in young adulthood in Great Britain.
The idea of a generation of young adults "boomeranging" back to the parental home has gained widespread currency in the British popular press. However, there is little empirical research identifying either increasing rates of returning home or the factors associated with this trend. This article addresses this gap in the literature using data from a long-running household panel survey to examin...
متن کاملRacial and ethnic differences in leaving and returning to the parental home: The role of life course transitions, socioeconomic resources, and family connectivity.
BACKGROUND Although Black and Hispanic young adults in the U.S. are less likely than Whites to move out of the parental home and more likely than Whites to return, reasons for these differences have not been clearly identified. OBJECTIVE This study examines the ability of racial/ethnic disparities in life course transitions, socioeconomic resources, and family connectivity to account for raci...
متن کاملReturning-Home Analysis in Tokyo Metropolitan Area at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake using Twitter Data
This paper clarifies the occurrence factors of commuters unable to return home and the returning-home decision-making at the time of the Great East Japan Earthquake by using Twitter data. First, to extract the behavior data from the tweet data, we identify each user’s returning-home behavior using support vector machines. Second, we create non-verbal explanatory factors using geotag data and ve...
متن کاملEthnic Differences in Returning Home: Explanations From a Life Course Perspective
Ethnic differences in leaving and returning home may reflect varying cultural norms regarding intergenerational coresidence, but also differences in transitions in linked domains, for example, employment and partnership transitions. This study uses Dutch population register data to compare returning home among second-generation Turks, Moroccans, Surinamese, and Antilleans with native Dutch who ...
متن کاملNutritional variables predict chances of returning home and activities of daily living in post-acute geriatric care
Background Little is known about the association between malnutrition and the chances of returning home from post-acute facilities in older adult patients. This study aimed to understand whether malnutrition and malnutrition-related factors would be determinants for returning home and activities of daily living (ADL) at discharge after post-acute care. Methods Patients aged ≥65 years living a...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Cognitive science
دوره 29 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005