Title: Information Processing
1Information Processing
- Cognitive Views of Learning and Definitions of
Knowledge
2Cognitive View of Learning
- Cognitive psychologists believe that
- Mental processes exist
- Mental processes can be studied scientifically
- Humans are active participants in their own acts
of cognition
3Comparing two perspectives
- Behavioral Psychology
- What is learned? Behaviors
- Why is reinforcement important? Reinforcement
strengthens behavior.
- Learners respond to environmental stimuli
- Knowledge is acquired
- Most study is done on animals
- Cognitive Psychology
- What is learned? Knowledge
- Why is reinforcement important? Reinforcement is
a source of feedback.
- Learners initiate learning
- Knowledge is constructed
- Study is done on both animals and people
4PRIOR Knowledge
- For cognitive psychologists, one of the most
important elements in the learning process is
what learners bring to the learning situation.
- Alexander (1996) indicates that what we already
know is a scaffold that supports the construction
of all future learning.
- Dochy, Segers, and Buehl (1999) indicate that
prior knowledge determines what we will pay
attention to, perceive, learn, and forget when
learning new content. - In a research investigation, Recht and Leslie
(1988) studied learners who had high and low
baseball knowledge and who were either good or
bad readers. The findings indicated that bad
readers with high baseball knowledge performed
better than good readers with low baseball
knowledge on outcome measures. - Consider the following what do such findings
mean to teachers?
- What are some strategies that teachers could use
to address prior knowledge in the learning
environments they design?
5Kinds of Knowledge
- General knowledge information that you can use
in many areas or in many ways for many purposes
(measuring using the metric system)
- Domain-specific knowledge information that is
useful to a particular situation or that applies
to one specific topic (computing a correlation)
- Declarative knowledge factual knowledge
knowing that
- Procedural knowledge knowledge of how do do
something or how to perform a task knowing how
- Conditional knowledge knowing when and why to
use either declarative or procedural knowledge
knowing when and why (to solve math problems,
you need to know when to apply one procedure and
when to apply another)
6Kinds of Knowledge
7Information Processing
- Information Processing involves
- Gathering information and organizing it in
relation to what you already know (encoding)
- Holding information (storage)
- Getting at information when needed (retrieval)
- The whole system is guided by control processes
that determine how and when information will flow
through the system
- The following slide provides a visual of the
Information Processing Model
8Information Processing Model
9Information Processing
10Sensory Memory
- First, it is important to know that sensory
information (sights, sounds, smells) is held very
briefly in memory
- Sensory memory is the initial processing that
transforms sensory stimuli into information that
we can make sense of
- The capacity of sensory memory is LARGE, but the
duration is very short (1-3 seconds)
- Perception is the process of both detecting a
stimulus and assigning meaning to it.
- People organize sensory information into patterns
or relationships instead of perceiving bits and
pieces of unrelated information, we perceive
organized, meaningful wholes. - The following slides describing some Gestalt
principles will further explain this.
11Gestalt Principles - Similarity
When things share visual characteristics such as
shape, size, color, texture, value or orientatio
n we see them as belonging together.
For example, in the visual on the left, the two
filled lines give your eyes the impression of tw
o horizontal lines, even though all the circles
are equidistant from each other. And, in the
example to your right, the larger circles appear
to belong together because of the similarity in
size.
12Gestalt Principle - Closure
Closure occurs when an object is incomplete or a
space is not completely enclosed. If
enough of the shape is indicated, people perceive
the whole by filling in the missing information.
Although the panda above is not complete, enough
is present for the eye to complete the shape.
When the viewer's perception completes a shape,
closure occurs. The principle of closure applie
s when we tend to see complete figures even when
part of the information is missing. For example,
in the second image, we see three black circles
covered by a white triangle. We react to pattern
s that are familiar, even though we often receive
incomplete information. In the final example
, we see a circle, though it is not complete.
13Getalt Principle Figure/Ground
The eye differentiates an object form its
surrounding area. A form, silhouette, or
shape is naturrally perceived as figure (object),
while the surrounding area is
perceived as ground (background).
In the first image, the figure and ground relati
onships change as the eye perceives
the form of a shade or the silhouette of a face.
Look carefully at the M.C. Escher print. Do you
see the white horses and riders?
Now look for the black horses and riders!
What do you see in the final image? An old lady
? A young woman? Can you see both?
14Attention
- We do not bring everything into working memory
when we first encounter new information. As
mentioned previously we select the stimuli we
will attend to. Again, what we pay attention to
is guided by what we already know and what we
think we need to know. Consider, then, the
following questions - What should teachers do to address the importance
of attention at the beginning of a lesson?
- How should textbooks and readings and handouts be
organized? What strategies can be used?
- What other strategies can be used in classes?
Think about and come up with specific examples.
15Information Processing
- Working and Short-term Memory
16Working Memory
- Working memory holds the information that you are
focusing on in a given moment (the information
you are working on). It is a component of the
memory system that holds information for about 20
seconds. - It is a temporary storage of information that is
at the time being processed
- The working memory capacity is limited. Youve
probably heard that the capacity of short-term
memory, for example, is 7 /1 2 (that is, we can
hold 5-9 items in this memory storage system at
once). - We can use strategies like chunking to overcome
this limitation, but usually 5-9 holds true in
everyday life. What is chunking? Chunking is
putting a set of items together into one. So,
for example, when we remember phone numbers, we
chunk the area code into one number and the
second set of three digits into another number.
That way, we can remember a 10-digit phone number
more easily.
17Working Memory
- Within working memory, there are several
constructs of interest.
- The Central Executive is the part of working
memory that directs attention, makes plans,
retrieves, and integrates, directing attention to
relevant information and suppressing information
that is irrelevant. It helps in coordinating
cognitive processes when more than one task must
be done at the same time. - The Phonological Loop is the where we store
verbal and audio information. The amount of
information that we can store in the phonological
loop is about the same as what we can rehearse,
by saying it to ourselves, for 1.5 to 2 seconds.
Even very few bits of information can be too much
for us to remember if the information is complex
or unfamiliar. So, for example, if you have to
deal with an unfamiliar phone system, such as one
in another country, you may not be able to
remember a 10-digit phone number because the
central executive system may compete with your
phonological loop. - The Visuaspatial Sketchpad is a system for
holding visual and spatial information and is
very similar to the phonological loop.
- It is possible for us to use both the
phonological loop and the visuaspatial sketchpad
at the same time, but they with both be slowed
down.
18Working Memory
- As a brief overview, generally speaking, the
duration of working memory is very short (about
5-20 seconds unless you are rehearsing the
information or processing it in some other way). - You must keep information activated in order to
retain it in working memory. Activation is high
as long as you are focusing on the information,
but as soon as your attention shifts away,
information decays or fades quickly from working
memory. - There are a number of ways we can retain
information in working memory
- Maintenance rehearsal is when you keep repeating
information to yourself
- Elaborative rehearsal is when you keep
information in working memory by associating it
with something else you already know (i.e.,
something in long term memory). This association
helps move the information to long term memory. - Chunking is when you group individual bits of
information into meaningful larger units.
- Forgetting is when information is lost through
interference or decay.
- Interference can occur when the processing of new
information gets confused with old information.
- Decay is the weakening and fading of memories
that occurs with the passage of time. If you
dont continue to pay attention to the
information, it decays (weakens) and finally
drops so low that the information cannot be
retrieved. - Consider the following question why might
forgetting sometimes be useful?
- What would happen, for example, if you overloaded
your working memory?
19Information Processing
20Long-term Memory
- Long term memory is the permanent store of
knowledge. In order to move information to
long-term memory, we have to put forward a lot of
effort. - Access to information in working memory is
immediate access to information in long term
memory requires time and effort
- Recent studies suggest that information is stored
in long term memory either in visual images or in
verbal units, or both. Those who believe this to
be true suggest that information that is coded
both visually and verbally is easiest to learn.
Such theorists would believe that illustrations
and animations are helpful in improving
understanding. - Other theorists posit that the brain is not large
enough to store all the images we have seen or
can imagine images must be stored as verbal cues
and translated into visual information when an
image is needed. - Regardless of which of these are true, as
teachers, we must find ways to help our students
move new information to long-term memory.
- What are some ways you can think of to help
students move new information to long-term
memory?
- The chart on the following page provides a
comparison of long-term memory with working
memory.
21Capacity, Duration, and Contents of Long Term
Memory
- What is Long Term Memory?
22Long-term memory Explicit and Implicit
Memory
Explicit Memory (conscious)
Implicit memory(unconscious)
Semanticmemory (facts, general Knowledge decla
rative)
23Long-term memory Explicit and Implicit
Memory
Explicit Memory (conscious)
Implicit memory(unconscious)
Episodicmemory (your own Experiences)
Semanticmemory (facts, general Knowledge decla
rative)
Episodic memory is tied to a particular place and
time. It also keeps tracks of the order
Of things it is a good place to store jokes,
gossip, and plots from files (books, etc).
24Long-term memory Explicit and Implicit
Memory
Explicit Memory (conscious)
Implicit memory(unconscious)
Episodicmemory (your own Experiences)
Semanticmemory (facts, general Knowledge decla
rative)
Procedural Memory (motor skills, habits, tacit
Rules)
Procedural memory, then, is long term memory for
how to do things.
Once procedural memory becomes habit, it is
stored in long term memory as motor skills,
habits, or rules. Procedural memory includes
condition-action rules. These tell use what
To do under certain conditions.
25Long-term memory Explicit and Implicit
Memory
Explicit Memory (conscious)
Implicit memory(unconscious)
Episodicmemory (your own Experiences)
Semanticmemory (facts, general Knowledge decla
rative)
Classical Conditioning Effects (e.g., condi-
tioned
emotional reactions)
Procedural Memory (motor skills, habits, tacit
Rules)
26Long-term memory Explicit and Implicit
Memory
Explicit Memory (conscious)
Implicit memory(unconscious)
Episodicmemory (your own Experiences)
Semanticmemory (facts, general Knowledge decla
rative)
Classical Conditioning Effects (e.g., condi-
tioned
emotional reactions)
Procedural Memory (motor skills, habits, tacit
Rules)
Priming (implicit activation of concepts in
long-term
Memory)
That is, you activate information already in
memory because of some stimulus in the
environment (but NOT consciously).
27Storing and Retrieving Information in Long Term
Memory
- The way you learn information in the first place
strongly affects its recall later.
- You need to integrate new information with
knowledge ALREADY in long-term memory as you
CONSTRUCT an understanding.
- What do the above mean?
- Why are the above two statements VERY important
for your learning and classroom teaching??
28Strong information
- Elaboration is adding and extending meaning by
connecting new information to existing knowledge.
We might apply schemas or something else in long
term memory and based on new information change
the schema slightly. Its sometimes automatic
sometimes we need to do so consciously. Its a
good strategy to use as you read
information/texts that are new in order to try
to think about what you already know and connect
the new information to something in your memory. - Elaboration is a form of rehearsal it keeps
information activated in working memory for long
enough to link it to long term memory. It also
builds extra links to existing knowledge. The
more links there are to something, the easier it
is to retrieve it. - How might you teach elaboration strategies to
your students?
- Material that is well organized is easier to
remember. Try to actively place information in a
structure that will help you learn (e.g., images,
visuals, flowcharts, concept maps, databases,
etc.). - How can you help your students organize
information so that it will be better stored in
long term memory? What TECHNOLOGIES and
APPLICATIONS might facilitate this process? - Why might rote memorization NOT help to
understand content in a course?
29Retrieving information from long term memory
- To retrieve information from long-term memory,
you have to sometimes search your memory. This
is sometimes a conscious activity, sometimes
unconscious. Sometimes, it is very hard to find
what you are looking for. - Activation spreading is the retrieval of
information based on how the information is
related to each other.
- Retrieval from long-term memory is the process of
searching for and finding information in long
term memory.
- Reconstruction is recreating information by using
memories, expectations, logic, and existing
knowledge.
- Some theorists believe that nothing is ever lost
from long term memory. Information stored in
long term memory may be available, given the
right cues (whereas information from working
memory is lost permanently when it is
forgotten.). If you cant remember something
that was once stored in the long-term memory, it
is possible that the links that you had to it
have weakened over time yet, given the right
cues, it is likely that you will be able to
remember or retrieve this information.