Given that embodied and enactive approaches to cognition put the lived body, intersubjectivity, and interaction at the very core of their research paradigms, discussions of how aspects of our lived identities can shape our cognitive processes would be a natural application. Despite this, there are only a few examples where e-approaches are used to directly discuss gender, race, disability, or sexuality. This conference will encourage discussion and further research on how e-approaches can take into account the particularities of social situatedness in perception, social cognition, and other cognitive processes.
Conference: E-Approaches to Social Difference and Disparity
Research Hub (room 2072), Building 19, University of Wollongong
