The Mind, Culture, and Activity Homepage is an interactive forum for a community of interdisciplinary scholars who share an interest in the study of human mind in its cultural and historical contexts. Our emphasis is research that seeks to resolve methodological problems associated with the analysis of human and theoretical approaches that place culture and activity at the center of attempts to understand human nature. Our participants come from a variety of disciplines, including anthropology, cognitive science, education, linguistics, psychology and sociology.
Central to the organization of activities in the community is the Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition at the University of California, San Diego. LCHC sponsors the MCA Discussion Forum and the associated XMCA, an e-mail discussion group.
This homepage seeks to integrate a variety of activities in the community into one on-line resource. On this page you will find links to current and past issues of MCA, on-line discussions from the XMCA mailing list, personal profiles of our participants, and links to other related Web sites. We invite all people interested in any aspect of our activities and research to contribute to a common dialogue among e-mail discussants, journal subscribers, and interested researchers.
This document was created from a video presentation that we put together for posting on the CHAT Vimeo site. The purpose of creating this text version is to provide people with a transcript of the speakers' arguments from the video to facilitate citations.
MCA Journal:
Abstracts and ordering information for the Mind, Culture, and
Activity International Journal.
Papers for Discussion:
This is an archive of papers submitted by members of our
community. Please note that some of these papers are drafts. Citation
is thus prohibited without author's permission.
XMCA Members:
Here you will find personal profiles
of our diverse participants.
Related Web Sites:
Our participants suggest interesting Web sites relative to our
interest at MCA. We have provided links to these sites as well as
descriptions of what they offer.
An archive of Historical Cluster Maps for MCA