Abstrakt: |
Significant changes have been observed in recent decades toward developing more cross-disciplinary research in the humanities. One of the clearest examples of this tendency, as well as what some view as one of the most promising undertakings in contemporary academia, is the growing area of cognitive humanities. Nevertheless, despite the theoretical and methodological advancements within certain subfields of cognitive humanities, very little has been said about the research movement as a whole. This paper is a preliminary attempt to define the genealogy and scope of the cognitive turn in the humanities through the use of quantitative methods and the tools of scientometrics. The data were collected from Web of Science (Arts and Humanities Citation Index) and subsequently analyzed and visualized through the use of commercially available software (ASReview, VOSviewer, Biblioshiny, and Tableau). The analysis was carried out considering four properties: temporal, geospatial, topical, and network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |