1 / 18

Cognition

Cognition. Psychology 3906. Introduction. Basically we are talking about thinking Problem solving Memory categorization. Categorization. We are VERY good at this Typicality is important A penguin is less birdlike than a robin A dolphin is less mammalish than a dog

strom
Download Presentation

Cognition

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. Cognition Psychology 3906

  2. Introduction • Basically we are talking about thinking • Problem solving • Memory • categorization

  3. Categorization • We are VERY good at this • Typicality is important • A penguin is less birdlike than a robin • A dolphin is less mammalish than a dog • Boster and D’Andrade (1989) had experts, non experts and local tribespeople classify birds, all agreed

  4. We think in categories • That whole semantic network thing • So natural categories are good • Even man made ones are pretty good • What about stereotypes • Oh no of course not • Err umm, they are ok actually (in fact we UNDERESTIMATE proclivities of groups!) • Depends on how you use them

  5. Memory • Boy do we run in to a heck of a lot of stuff on a moment by moment basis • We don’t remember it all • An efficient memory, like ours or any other species’ forgets, or does not even process much of what it encounters

  6. Putting evolution and cognition together, an example • Anderson and Krebs, 1978 • Mathematical model of when food storing should evolve • Food storing can only evolve if you recover your own caches • Sherry, Avery and Stevens (1981) • Birds seem to recover own seeds using memory

  7. More data • Shettleworth and Krebs, 1982 • Marsh tits storing seeds in a lab • Better at recovery of cached seeds than randomly placed seeds • Half of seeds removed • They are using memory • In other general memory tests, there have been clear differences between storers and non storers in the corvid family

  8. We have already discussed the hippocampal differences • But what about the parids? • Data are equivocal • Maybe it is not how much they remember, but how they remember

  9. Qualitative vs. Quantitative differences • Brodbeck and his colleagues…. (ahem) pioneered this type of work • Comparing storers and non storers on what they remember in different tasts • Brodbeck, 1994; Brodbeck and Shettleworth, 1995

  10. Brodbeck, 1994 • Chickadees would find a seed in a feeder • Usually return later and eat it • Move them around to dissociate colour and spatial location • The chickadees responded last to the correctly coloured feeder • Non storing Dark Eyed Juncos responded to all three cue types equally

  11. And the comparisons continue • Same thing on a smaller scale using a computer touch sensitive monitor • Birds rewarded for going to one place and not another • Different coloured patches • Switch them around • Chickadees rely on space, juncos do not • Indeed, in another experiment it was determined that chickadees when directly tested to very poorly on coulor!

  12. Functionally • Well functionally this makes a lot of sense • Birds remember WHERE something is, not what colour it is • Colours change • That line of trees over there is still going to be over there • However, the strange result really is that of the junco! • Brodbeck, Boisvert, Vaughan and Grant (1997)

  13. D F 3 7 Beer Coke 25 16 Problem Solving • Wason Selection task

  14. Social context • Cheater detection is easy • Not familiarity with the content • Even with toddlers! • The Big Bird problem

  15. Probability information • We are not good at probability • Seems odd though • Gambler’s fallacy • We are better at doing ‘intuitive statistics when given frequency data

  16. Sex Differences • They exist, no matter what you have been told. • This, for reasons that escape me, scares some people • Hormonal effects on spatial ability • Not really surprising

  17. Conclusions • Cognition has been affected by selection • Memory is efficient • Logic is easy if it involves cheater detection • There are sex differences • We are pretty good intuitive statisticians

More Related