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Two or more individuals co-represent something if they each individually represent it and their representations are of the same kind (for example, they are both motor representations).
 
E.g. the double life of motor representation.
 
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Add to figure: stimulus -> representation invovles stimulus discrimination; representation -> response involving planning. So we have a story about processes as well as about representations. Animal learning focuses on S–R plus stimulus discrimination but I take it that the representations are important there too.
 
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A task representation links a representation of an event, such as the timer’s ringing, and a motor representation that specifies an action, such as taking the stew out of the oven, in such a way that if the event occurs, the subject becomes disposed to prepare and perform the action represented.
 
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co-representation task representation task co-representation
 
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background
 
This is just the data from the first condition (narrowest letter spacing)
 
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Flanker task
 
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‘In the Nonhuman Co-Actor group, the procedure and treatment of the participants was as in the Human Co-Actor group, except that in the joint condition the human co-actor was replaced by a golden Japanese waving cat.’ (Dolk et al., 2014, p. 1226)
 
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Baus et al. (2014)
 

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