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  1. Culture and Cognition: What is Universal about the Representation of Color Experience?Kimberly Jameson - 2005 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 5 (3-4):293-348.
    Existing research in color naming and categorization primarily reflects two opposing views: A Cultural Relativist view that posits color perception is greatly shaped by culturally specific language associations and perceptual learning, and a Universalist view that emphasizes panhuman shared color processing as the basis for color naming similarities within and across cultures. Recent empirical evidence finds color processing differs both within and across cultures. This divergent color processing raises new questions about the sources of previously observed cultural coherence and cross-cultural (...)
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  • Subject Variations in Sorting Data: Revisiting the Points-of-View Model.David Bimler & John Kirkland - 2013 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 13 (3-4):329-346.
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  • Applying Points-of-View Analysis to Individual Variations in Colour Sorting Data.David L. Bimler, Mari Uusküla & John Kirkland - 2015 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 15 (1-2):87-108.
    “Points-of-View” analysis has been promoted as an appropriate analysis for similarity data collected with the Method of Sorting. It can be regarded as an extension of Cultural Consensus Analysis. The latter assumes that subjects all base their responses on a single shared ‘model’ of the items to be sorted. Conversely, the titular “points-of-view” are multiple models, sampled singularly by some subjects’ responses, while other subjects combine the models in various proportions. The analysis appears to be comparatively insensitive to the artefacts (...)
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