All Stories

  1. Was Jesus a 'hero' to those who first wrote about him?
  2. Point Me In the Right Direction: Understanding User Behaviour with As-The-Crow-Flies Navigation
  3. Pragmatic and Conversational Features of Arabic-Speaking Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorder: Examining Performance and Caregivers' Perceptions
  4. Fictive motion in the context of mountaineering
  5. Sculptors, Architects, and Painters Conceive of Depicted Spaces Differently
  6. Situated Interaction with a Smart Environment: Challenges and Opportunities
  7. Reference Frames
  8. Communicative Success in Spatial Dialogue: The Impact of Functional Features and Dialogue Strategies
  9. Time will not help unskilled observers to understand a cluttered spatial scene
  10. Orientation and metacognition in virtual space.
  11. Efficiently Connecting Textual and Visual Information in Operating Instructions
  12. Choose Your Words Wisely: What Verbal Hesitation Indicates About Eyewitness Accuracy
  13. Where did it come from, where do you go? Direction sources influence navigation decisions during spatial uncertainty
  14. Conceptual Transformation and Cognitive Processes in Origami Paper Folding
  15. Where Snow is a Landmark: Route Direction Elements in Alpine Contexts
  16. Cognitive Discourse Analysis: accessing cognitive representations and processes through language data
  17. Boundaries and Prototypes in Categorizing Direction
  18. Representing space in cognitive science: from empirical insights via computational models to human-centred assistance
  19. Representing Space in Cognition
  20. Cognitive operations in tour planning*
  21. Interpreting Motion: Grounded Representations for Spatial Language Inderjeet Mani* and James Pustejovsky‡ (*Children's Organization of Southeast Asia and ‡Brandeis University) Oxford University Press (Explorations in Language and Space series, edited b...
  22. The spatial thinking of origami: evidence from think-aloud protocols
  23. Spatial Information Theory
  24. Annotation of negotiation processes in joint-action dialogues
  25. Tutorial report: Understanding spatial thought through language use
  26. The role of structure and function in the conceptualization of direction
  27. Spatial directionals for robot navigation
  28. Visual Versus Verbal Location Information on the iPhone
  29. Review of Coventry, Tenbrink & Bateman (2009): Spatial Language and Dialogue
  30. Verbalization of problem solving processes in unaided object assembly
  31. Verbalization of problem solving processes in unaided object assembly
  32. Tutorial: Understanding cognitive processes through language use
  33. To Err is Human: Landmark vs. Turn Reliance Under Conditions of Route Ambiguity
  34. Relevance in Spatial Navigation and Communication
  35. Linguistic Principles for Spatial Relational Reasoning
  36. Review of Coventry, Tenbrink & Bateman (2009): Spatial Language and Dialogue
  37. Would you follow your own route description? Cognitive strategies in urban route planning
  38. Spatial Strategies in the Description of Complex Configurations
  39. The language of space and time
  40. Reference frames of space and time in language
  41. The Effect of Activity on Relevance and Granularity for Navigation
  42. A Model of Spatial Reference Frames in Language
  43. Route instructions in map-based human–human and human–computer dialogue: A comparative analysis
  44. Conceptual layers and strategies in tour planning
  45. A linguistic ontology of space for natural language processing
  46. Function and context affect spatial information packaging at multiple levels
  47. Presenting spatial information: Granularity, relevance, and integration
  48. Spatial behavior and linguistic representation: Collaborative interdisciplinary specialized workshop
  49. Modelling Illocutionary Structure: Combining Empirical Studies with Formal Model Analysis
  50. Influence of Geometry and Objects on Local Route Choices during Wayfinding
  51. Contrast sets in spatial and temporal language
  52. Telling Rolland Where to Go: HRI Dialogues on Route Navigation
  53. Spatial Language and Dialogue
  54. Introduction—Spatial Language and Dialogue: Navigating the Domain
  55. Identifying Objects in English and German: a Contrastive Linguistic Analysis of Spatial Reference 1
  56. Variable Granularity in Route Directions
  57. The verbalization of multiple strategies in a variant of the traveling salesperson problem
  58. Space, Time, and the Use of Language
  59. Review of Graf (2006): The Ontogenetic Development of Literal and Metaphorical Space in Language
  60. The Role of Conceptual and Linguistic Ontologies in Interpreting Spatial Discourse
  61. Wayfinding Strategies in Behavior and Language: A Symmetric and Interdisciplinary Approach to Cognitive Processes
  62. Discourse Factors Influencing Spatial Descriptions in English and German
  63. Spatial Reference in Linguistic Human-Robot Interaction: Iterative, Empirically Supported Development of a Model of Projective Relations
  64. Identifying Objects on the Basis of Spatial Contrast: An Empirical Study
  65. Why Should Children Adapt, and When?
  66. (Non-)Temporal concepts conveyed bybefore,after, andthenin dialogue
  67. COGNITIVE MODELING OF SPATIAL REFERENCE FOR HUMAN-ROBOT INTERACTION
  68. Affordance-Based Human-Robot Interaction
  69. Spatial Knowledge Representation for Human-Robot Interaction
  70. Retrieval Enhances Certainty: Using Verbal Hesitation to Understand Retrieval Enhanced Suggestibility Effects
  71. Natural language instructions for joint spatial reference between naive users and a mobile robot
  72. Discovering Spatiotemporal Concepts in Discourse