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The Alexander Romanovich Luria SiteThe lab was awarded the 2010 American Educational Research Association's Sylvia Scribner Award. Several generations of members from the lab gave a collective talk for the occasion at the AERA conference in Denver, 2010. Slides and text from this talk are available here The Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition
was established at UCSD in 1978. As its name implies, members of LCHC
pursue research which takes differences among human beings as a
starting point for understanding human mental processes. We adopt an
ecological approach to our subject matter, looking at systems that
include mediating tools, people, representations, institutions and
activities. Populations varying in age, culture, biological
characteristics, social class, schooling, ethnicity, etc. are studied
in a wide range of activity settings in various social institutions
(schools, hospitals, workplaces) and countries. Correspondingly,
we use a wide range of methods (such as participant observation,
ethnography, experimentation, discourse-analysis) to bring into clear
relief the role of culturally inflected collective social practices,
change over time, and the cultural-historical context of the people
among whom we work in the phenomena we study. |
Contacts:
Brenda Macevicz
Phone: (858)534-2355. Fax: (858) 534-7746