Cognitive vs Psychosocial - What's the difference?
cognitive | psychosocial |
Relating to the part of mental functions that deals with logic, as opposed to affective which deals with emotions.
* {{quote-web
, date = 2013-07-09
, author = Joselle DiNunzio Kehoe
, title = Cognition, brains and Riemann
, site = plus.maths.org
, url = http://plus.maths.org/content/cognition-brains-and-riemann
, accessdate = 2013-09-08
}}
Intellectual
(of behaviour) having both psychological and social aspects
* '>citation
As adjectives the difference between cognitive and psychosocial
is that cognitive is relating to the part of mental functions that deals with logic, as opposed to affective which deals with emotions while psychosocial is having both psychological and social aspects.cognitive
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- Recent findings in cognitive' neuroscience are also beginning to unravel how the body perceives magnitudes through sensory-motor systems. Variations in size, speed, quantity and duration, are registered in the brain by electro-chemical changes in neurons. The neurons that respond to these different magnitudes share a common neural network. In a survey of this research, ' cognitive neuroscientists Domenica Bueti and Vincent Walsh tell us that the brain does not treat temporal perception, spatial perception and perceived quantity as different.
See also
* affective * motor ----psychosocial
English
Adjective
(-)- It seems to me that most of those who adhere to an
organicist position in psychiatry espouse a system of
values of which they are unaware. They imply that they recognize as
scientific only physics (and its branches), but instead of
asserting this, they say that they object to psychosocial the-
ories only because they are false. [...]