Gui Sanches de Oliveira
@guicogsci.bsky.social
Research Fellow @ Univ. of Murcia 🇪🇸
Pragmatism, philosophy of science, embodied cognition, ecological psychology
https://webs.um.es/guilherme.sanches
Pragmatism, philosophy of science, embodied cognition, ecological psychology
https://webs.um.es/guilherme.sanches
"Psychology's WEIRD problems" (co-authored w/ @edbaggs.bsky.social) is available open access
it even includes a brief discussion *about* open access: see chapter on the WEIRD institutional dimension of psychological science, biases in funding, peer review, publishing practices etc
it even includes a brief discussion *about* open access: see chapter on the WEIRD institutional dimension of psychological science, biases in funding, peer review, publishing practices etc
October 21, 2025 at 1:16 PM
"Psychology's WEIRD problems" (co-authored w/ @edbaggs.bsky.social) is available open access
it even includes a brief discussion *about* open access: see chapter on the WEIRD institutional dimension of psychological science, biases in funding, peer review, publishing practices etc
it even includes a brief discussion *about* open access: see chapter on the WEIRD institutional dimension of psychological science, biases in funding, peer review, publishing practices etc
Reposted by Gui Sanches de Oliveira
@moritz-bammel.bsky.social and @guicogsci.bsky.social discuss the possibility of extending radical embodiment to human social collectives. They compare two established approaches: behavior settings theory and the extended cognition notion of cognitive institutions
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Scaling-Up Behavior Settings: An Ecological Approach to Cognitive Institutions - Topoi
Barker’s notion of “behavior settings” has been fruitfully used in Gibsonian ecological psychology to highlight the importance of place and to account for how perception–action of affordances is socio...
link.springer.com
August 22, 2025 at 3:26 PM
@moritz-bammel.bsky.social and @guicogsci.bsky.social discuss the possibility of extending radical embodiment to human social collectives. They compare two established approaches: behavior settings theory and the extended cognition notion of cognitive institutions
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
link.springer.com/article/10.1...