| Literature DB >> 25379231 |
Abstract
Use of the terms cognition and behavior and their variants can be traced back to the middle-ages. What is not widely known is how the terms were first used in the literature. This article identifies variations of terms for cognition and behavior and traces the first use of the terms using the Oxford English Dictionary (OED). A systematic search of the OED was conducted, identifying terms in the cognition and behavior families. Terms are defined and the year the term first appeared in the literature is identified. Terms are sorted and grouped chronologically by first appearance to determine their first use in the literature as noted in the OED. Results indicated more words are related to cognition than behavior. The first term related to cognition to appear was cogitation in circa 1225; while the first term related to behavior was port, which appeared circa 1330. Each family of terms experienced tremendous growth during the first appearance of terms. The cognition family saw 60% of its terms appear in the 17(th) and 19(th) centuries. The behavior family saw nearly 75% of its terms make their first appearance during the 15(th) through the 17(th) centuries.Entities:
Keywords: analysis; appearance; behavior; cognition; history; literature; origin
Year: 2013 PMID: 25379231 PMCID: PMC4217620 DOI: 10.3390/bs3010143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Cognition words defined and listed by date.
| Date of First Appearance | Term | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Cogitation | The action of thinking or reflecting; attentive consideration, reflection, meditation | |
| 1325 | Recognizance | A bond or obligation by which a person undertakes before a court or magistrate to perform some act or observe some condition |
| 1388–89 | Recognize | Of a feudal superior: to resume possession of land |
| 1394 | Cognizant (-isant) | To know, recognize |
| 1400 | Cognizance (-sance) | Knowledge, understanding; also acquaintance |
| 1400–1 | Recognosce | Of a feudal superior; to resume possession of (land) |
| 1436 | Recognizor | One who enters into a recognizance |
| 1447 | Cognition | The action or faculty of knowing; knowledge, consciousness; acquaintance with a subject |
| 1450 | Recognition | Knowledge or consciousness; understanding |
| 1460 | Recognitor | A member of a jury impanelled on an assize or inquest |
| 1477 | Discognisance | Non-recognition |
| 1490 | Cogitative | Having the power or faculty of thought; thinking (as a permanent attribute) |
| About 1500 | Precognition | Antecedent cognition or knowledge; (supposed) foreknowledge, esp. as a form of extrasensory perception |
| 1522 | Incogitable | Unthinkable, inconceivable |
| 1529 | Uncogitable | Obsolete word |
| 1531–32 | Cognizee (-isee) | The party in whose favour a fine of land was levied; he to whom cognizance was made |
| 1540 | Miscognizant | Not cognizant, knowledgeable, or aware; ignorant of something; spec. ignorant of the law, or some aspect of it |
| 1569 | Precogitate | To cogitate, think, or think over beforehand; to consider beforehand, premeditate |
| 1586 | Cognitive | Of or pertaining to cognition, or the action or process of knowing; having the attribute of cognizing |
| 1591 | Recogitation | The action or result of thinking over something again; an instance of this |
| 1592 | Recognizee | The person to whom another is bound in a recognizance |
| 1596 | Precogitation | Previous consideration or meditation; thinking over beforehand; a prior reflection or idea |
| 1602 | Recogitate | To think over (something) again |
| 1603 | Miscognize | To fail to appreciate or acknowledge |
| 1608 | Recognizer | A person who (or occasionally a thing which) recognizes someone or something |
| 1609 | Incognite | Unknown |
| 1611 | Recognizon | Acknowledgement |
| 1612 | Incogitancy | Want of thought or reflection; thoughtlessness, heedlessness, negligence; inadvertence |
| 1624 | Praecognitum | A thing already known, especially a thing needed or assumed to be known in order to infer or ascertain something else |
| 1628 | Incogitant | Thoughtless, unthinking; characterized by want of thought; inconsiderate |
| 1633 | Cogitate | To think, reflect, ponder, meditate; to exercise the thinking faculties |
| 1637 | Incogitance | Want of thought |
| 1638 | Incognito | An unknown man; one who conceals his identity; an anonymous person |
| About 1645 | Precogitancy | Prior consideration or thought |
| 1648 | Incogitantly | Unthinkingly, thoughtlessly, without consideration or reflection |
| 1649 | Cogitabund | Musing, meditating, thoughtful, deep in thought |
| 1652 | Incogitate | Not thought of; unexpected; unpremeditated |
| 1654 | Precognit | A preliminary discussion |
| 1659 | Cognize (-ise) | To take cognizance |
| 1659 | Decognize | To cease or fail to recognize |
| 1671 | Incognita | A feminine version of incognito |
| 1678 | Cognizable (-sable) | Capable of being known, perceived, or apprehended by the senses or intellect; perceptible |
| 1680 | Cogitant | Thinking, that thinks |
| 1682 | Recognizable | Able to be recognized or identified; that permits recognition |
| 1688 | Cogitability | Capability of being thought or conceived |
| 1688 | Cogitable | That can be thought or conceived; thinkable, conceivable |
| 1690 | Incogitative | Unthinking; destitute of the thinking faculty |
| 1691 | Incognoscible | Unknowable, beyond cognizance |
| 1720 | Uncognizable | |
| 1722 | Cogitativity | Capacity or power of thinking |
| 1726 | Precognizance | Prior knowledge or understanding |
| 1759 | Cogitancy | Cogitant or thinking quality |
| 1790 | Recognized | Acknowledged, accepted; known, identified |
| 1802 | Recognitive | Of, relating to, or involving recognition or acknowledgment; that recognizes |
| 1813 | Recognitory | Of, or relating to, recognition or acknowledgement |
| 1817 | Cognizably | In a cognizable manner; recognizably; perceptibly |
| 1821 | Uncognoscible | |
| 1824 | Incognoscibility | The quality or condition of being incognoscible; unknowableness |
| 1827 | Cognitional | Of or pertaining to cognition |
| 1827 | Uncognoscibility | |
| 1831 | Recognizably | To a recognizable degree, perceptibly; in a recognizable manner |
| 1836 | Recognizability | The fact or quality of being recognizable |
| 1837 | Incognizant | Not cognizant; without cognizance, knowledge, or apprehension of; unaware, unconscious of |
| 1840 | Precognizant | Having previous cognizance; having prior knowledge or understanding (of something) |
| 1852 | Incognizable | Not cognizable; incapable of being known, perceived, or apprehended by the senses or intellect; incapable of recognition |
| 1853 | Incogitability | The quality of being unthinkable; incapability of being thought |
| 1854 | Cogito | The principle ‘cogito, ergo sum’, or any equivalent formula, by which Descartes claimed to establish his own existence as a thinking being from the fact of his thinking or awareness; loosely, conscious awareness or subjectivity |
| 1856 | Incognizance | Want of knowledge or recognition |
| 1860 | Incognizability | The quality of being incognizable |
| 1860 | Uncognisant | |
| 1862 | Incognitive | Destitute of the faculty for cognition; unable to take cognizance |
| 1866 | Cogitandum | That which should be thought; the ideal or correct processes of thought, as opposed to the actual processes |
| 1875 | Cognitum | An object of cognition |
| 1877 | Uncognized | |
| 1878 | Cogitatum | That which is thought; the actual processes of thought, as opposed to the ideal thought-processes |
| 1880 | Cognitively | In a cognitive manner; with regard to, or from the point of view of, cognition |
| 1880 | Cognitor | An attorney or procurator |
| 1952 | Cognitivist | One who holds that moral judgments are true or false statements about moral facts |
| 1954 | Precog | A person who predicts something; a person with precognition |
Behavior words, defined and listed chronologically.
| Date of First Appearance | Word | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Port | Bearing, deportment, or carriage, esp. dignified or stately bearing; demeanour or manner | |
| Behave | To bear, comport, or conduct oneself; to act | |
| 1474 | Deport | Behavior, bearing, deportment |
| 1475 | Misbehave | To behave badly or wrongly; to conduct oneself improperly |
| 1482 | Behaving | Conduct, behaviour |
| 1486 | Misbehaviour | Bad behavior, improper conduct |
| 1490 | Behaviour | Manner of conducting oneself in the external relations of life; demeanor, deportment, bearing, manners |
| 1588 | Comport | To bear, endure; to tolerate |
| 1589 | Behavioured | Conducted, mannered, behaved |
| 1590 | Comportance | Carriage, bearing, behaviour, manner of conducting oneself |
| 1595 | Deportation | The action of carrying over; forcible removable, especially into exile |
| 1597 | Misbehaved | Badly behaved |
| 1599 | Comportable | Capable of being borne or endured; tolerable, bearable |
| 1599 | Deportate | To carry or convey away |
| 1601 | Deportment | Manner of conducting oneself; conduct (of life); behavior |
| 1604 | Behaved | Conducted, mannered |
| 1605 | Comportment | Personal bearing, carriage, demeanor, deportment; behaviour, outward conduct, course of action |
| 1609 | Comportioner | One of a number who share together |
| 1611 | Deporture | Carriage, bearing, deportment |
| 1616 | Deportator | One who deports or transports |
| 1633 | Comportation | The action of bringing together or collecting |
| About 1734 | Incomportable | Not to be borne, intolerable, insupportable |
| 1891 | Deportable | Liable to, or punishable by, deportation |
| 1895 | Deportee | One who is or has been deported |
| 1913 | Behaviourism | A theory and method of psychological investigation based on the study and analysis of behaviour |
| About 1927 | Behavioural | Concerned with, or forming part of, behaviour |
| 1939 | Interbehaviour |
Cognition and Behavior terms categorized by century of first literary appearance.
| Century | Cognition Words that Make Their First Appearance | Behavior Words that Make Their First Appearance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| n | % | n | % | |
| 13th | 1 | 1.26 | 0 | 0 |
| 14th | 3 | 3.79 | 1 | 3.70 |
| 15th | 8 | 10.12 | 6 | 22.22 |
| 16th | 10 | 12.65 | 7 | 25.92 |
| 17th | 26 | 32.91 | 7 | 25.92 |
| 18th | 5 | 6.32 | 1 | 3.70 |
| 19th | 24 | 30.37 | 2 | 7.40 |
| 20th | 2 | 2.53 | 3 | 11.11 |
| Cogitability | Incogitable | Precognizance |
| Cogitable | Incogitability | Precognizant |
| Cogitabund | Incogitance | Recogitate |
| Cogitancy | Incogitancy | Recogitation |
| Cogitandum | Incogitant | Recognition |
| Cogitant | Incogitantly | Recognitive |
| Cogitate | Incogitate | Recognitor |
| Cogitation | Incogitative | Recognitory |
| Cogitative | Incognitive | Recognizability |
| Cogitativity | Incognita | Recognizable |
| Cogitatum | Incognite | Recognizably |
| Cogito | Incognito | Recognizance |
| Cognition | Incognizability | Recognize |
| Cognitional | Incognizable | Recognized |
| Cognitive | Incognizance | Regognizee |
| Cognitively | Incognizant | Recognizer |
| Cognitivist | Incognoscible | Recognizon |
| Cognitor | Incognoscibility | Recognizor |
| Cognitum | Miscognizant | Recognosce |
| Cognizable (-sable) | Miscognize | Uncogitable |
| Cognizably | Praecognitum | Uncognisant |
| Cognizance (-sance) | Precog | Uncognizable |
| Cognizant (-isant) | Precogitancy | Uncognized |
| Cognize (-ise) | Precogitate | Uncognoscibility |
| Cognizee (-isee) | Precogitation | Uncognoscible |
| Decognize | Precognit | |
| Discognisance | Precognition |
| Behave | Comportance | Deportee |
| Behaved | Comportation | Deportment |
| Behaving | Comportioner | Deporture |
| Behaviour | Comportment | Incomportable |
| Behavioural | Deport | Interbehaviour |
| Behavioured | Deportable | Misbehave |
| Behaviourism | Deportate | Misbehaved |
| Comport | Deportation | Misbehaviour |
| Comportable | Deportator | Port |