Machine generated contents note: Introduction. - Part I: History of Cognitive Anthropology and the nature and types of Cultural Knowledge Structures. - 1. A History of Cognitive Anthropology. - 2. The History of the Cultural Models School Reconsidered: A Paradigm Shift in Cognitive Anthropology. - 3. The Cognitive Context of Cognitive Anthropology. - 4. The Limits of the Habitual: Shifting Paradigms for Language and Thought. - 5. Types of Collective Representations: Cognition, Mental Architecture, and Cultural Knowledge. - 6. Personal Knowledge and Collective Representations. - Part II: Methodologies. - 7. Methods of Data Collection. - 8. Data, Method, and Interpretation in Cognitive Anthropology. - 9. Multi-item Scales and Cognitive Ethnography. - 10. Consensus Analysis. - 11. Narrative, Mind, and Culture. - 12. Simulation (and Modeling). - Part III: Cognitive Structures of Cultural Domains. - 13. Mathematical Representation of Cultural Constructs. - 14. Kinship Theory and Cognitive Theory in Anthropology. - 15. Numerical Cognition and Ethnomathematics. - 16. 'Indigenous knowledge' and the Understanding of Cultural Cognition: The Contribution of Studies of Environmental Knowledge Systems. - 17. Emotions, Motivation, and Behavior in Cognitive Anthropology. - 18. Social Networks, Cognition, and Culture. - Part IV: Cognitive Anthropology and other Disciplines. - 19. Culture and Cognition: The Role of Cognitive Anthropology in Anthropology and the Cognitive Science. - 20. Cultural Models, Power, and Hegemony. - 21. Cognitive Anthropology Through a Gendered Lens. - 22. Sociality in Cognitive and Sociocultural Anthropologies: The Relationships aren't Just Additive. - 23. Cognitive Anthropology and Education: Foundational Models of Self and Cultural Models of Teaching and Learning in Japan and the United States. - 24. Archaeological Approaches to Cognitive Evolution. - Part V: Some Examples of Contemporary Research. - 25. Dots, Sprinkles, and Flecks: Sonar Talk and the Distributed Cognition Model of Mind. - 26. A Foundational Cultural Model in Polynesia: Monarchy, Democracy, and the Architecture of the Mind. - 27. Cognitive Approaches to the Study of Romantic Love: Semantic, Cross-Cultural, and as a Process. - 28. Trouble as Part of Everyday Life: Cognitive and Sociocultural Processes in Avoiding and Responding to Illness. - 29. Cultural Models of "Benign Senescent Forgetfulness" vs. Alzheimer's Disease: A Consensus Analysis of Three U.S. Ethnic Groups. - Afterward: One Cognitive View of Culture