1 / 0

Introduction to Cognitive Psychology

Introduction to Cognitive Psychology. Cognitive Psychology Is…. The study of how people perceive, learn, remember, and think about information. Problem Solving. Decision Making. Memory. Attention. Reading. Language. Dialectic. flaws/alt idea. Thesis. Antithesis. Synthesis:

abdalla
Download Presentation

Introduction to Cognitive Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to Cognitive Psychology

  2. Cognitive Psychology Is… The study of how people perceive, learn, remember, and think about information. Problem Solving Decision Making Memory Attention Reading Language
  3. Dialectic flaws/alt idea Thesis Antithesis Synthesis: best of both flaws/alt idea New Thesis
  4. Philosophical Roots Rationalist Logic & reasoning is key Empiricist Experience & observation is key
  5. Rationalism (Descartes) Empiricism (Locke) Synthesis: Both have a role (Kant)
  6. Functionalism (James) “Process” Structuralism (Titchener) “Elements” Synthesis: Associationism (Ebbinghaus & Thorndike)
  7. Behaviorism (Pavlov) “Contingency” Associationism (Thorndike) “Satisfaction” Synthesis: Radical Behaviorism Should study only environment and behavior—not thoughts. (Watson & Skinner)
  8. Less radical Behaviorist Cognitive Map –a thought! (Tolman) Behaviorism Dominated until…. Synthesis: Cognitions should play an active role in psychology (Gestalt, Bandura)
  9. Important to Cognitive Psychology Lashley emphasized that the brain actively processes information Hebb targeted cells as center of learning Chompsky’s review of Skinner’s Verbal Behavior: “reductio ad absurdum”
  10. Important to Cognitive Psychology 1950’s Development of Computers Turing Test and Artificial Intelligence A "cognitive revolution” occurred and increased interest in the study of mental processes (cognitions)
  11. Goals of Research Data Gathering Data Analysis Theory Development Hypothesis formation Hypothesis testing Application to real world
  12. Research Methods Experiments Psychobiological studies Self report Case studies Naturalistic Observation Computer Simulations
  13. In an Experiment… Random sample of participants Manipulate the Independent Variable Create experimental group Create control group Randomly assign participants Measure the Dependent Variable Same for all groups Control all other variables Prevent confounds
  14. Typical Independent Variables Manipulate stimulus materials Compare words to non-words Compare color diagrams to black and white Compare Yes questions to No questions Control how participants process materials Use imagery to study versus repetition Vary speed of presentation of materials
  15. Typical Dependent Variables Reaction Time (milliseconds) Mental events take time Accuracy/Error analysis How well the participant does on a task
  16. Correlational Studies Cannot infer causation Simply measure variables of interest Nature of relationship Positive Correlation Negative Correlation Strength of relationship Determined by size of “r”
  17. Example of Correlational Cognitive Study An examination of the relationship between confidence and accuracy of eyewitnesses What do you think the relationship is? Positive? Negative? Strong? Weak? It is not a strong positive correlation! Many studies indicate that high confidence does not mean high accuracy.
  18. Psychobiological Studies Postmortem studies Examine the cortex of dyslexics after death Brain damaged individuals and their deficits Study amnesiacs with hippocampus damage Monitor a participant doing a cognitive task Measure brain activity while a participant is reciting a poem
  19. Self Report Studies Verbal Protocol Participants describe their conscious thoughts while solving a story problem Diary Study Participants keep track of memory failures Naturalistic Observation Monitor decision making of pilots during flights
  20. Case Studies Intensive studies of individuals May examine archival records, interviews, direct observation, or participant-observations Creativity of successful individuals The deficits of a neglected child
  21. Computers in Research Analogy for human Cognition The sequence of symbol manipulation that underlies thinking The goal: discovery of the programs in humans’ memory Computer simulations of Artificial Intelligence Recreate human processes using computers
  22. Underlying Themes Nature vs. Nurture Rationalism vs. Empiricism Structures vs. Processes Domain Generality vs. Domain Specificity Causal Inferences vs. Ecological validity Applied vs. Basic Research Biological vs. Behavioral Methods
  23. Key Ideas in Cognitive… Data can only be fully explained with theories, and theories are insufficient without data – thus creating the cycle of science. Theory Data
  24. Key Ideas in Cognitive… Cognition is typically adaptive, but errors made can be informative. Example- Spoonerisms: A lack of pies (A pack of lies) It's roaring with pain (It's pouring with rain) Errors can be used to infer how speech production occurs.
  25. Key Ideas in Cognitive… Cognitive processes interact with each other and with non-cognitive processes Emotions may affect decisions Working memory capacity contributes to reading speed Perception contributes to memory decisions
  26. Key Ideas in Cognitive… Many different methods are used to study cognition Experiments Correlational studies Individual differences Case studies Clinical studies
  27. Key Ideas in Cognitive… Basic research often leads to important applications and applied research often contributes to a more basic understanding of cognition Priming is explained by spreading activation in memory, and can also explain why skilled readers may read faster Studying the common errors that 1st graders make in math class can help us to better understand how humans process mathematical information
More Related