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Chapter 1: Introduction to Cognitive Psychology

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Title: Chapter 1: Introduction to Cognitive Psychology


1
Chapter 1 Introduction to Cognitive Psychology
Joel Cooper University of Utah
2
Bias
  • To influence in a particular, typically unfair
    direction prejudice.
  • Everyone is biased.
  • This class deals with fundamental questions such
    as
  • Learning, memory, attention, knowledge, language,
    creativity, decision making and intelligence.
  • This is a science class and offers an explanation
    for these phenomenon from that perspective.

3
Accretion of Knowledge
  • 100,000 years of modern man
  • 6,000 years with the wheel
  • 110 years with the car
  • 55 years with the jet
  • Why wasnt the wheel invented earlier?
  • Why the recent explosion in technology?

4
A graphical rendering of knowledge accumulation
Dissemination of Knowledge in the World
Arbitrary amount of background knowledge needed
for the invention of the wheel
Distance
Time
5
What speeds the buildup of knowledge?
  • Those things which increase the amount of
    information that can be stored over time and
    shared across distance.
  • Knowledge that cannot be stored is lost.
  • Knowledge that cannot be shared is not augmentive.

6
Knowledge Growth
  • Keys to knowledge growth
  • Storage
  • Transmission
  • The knowledge feedback loop creates exponential
    growth in the knowledge base from which knowledge
    is created. Each new device speeds the process
    of growth by increasing the amount of information
    that can be shared across distance and time.

7
Knowledge
  • Builds based on whats available
  • There is no simple or obvious advancement
  • Little available knowledge in societies
  • Without writing
  • With little inter-group contact
  • Groups with low population density
  • Role of the elderly was very different then

8
Recent contributors to the buildup of knowledge
  • Agriculture
  • Trade
  • Class divisions
  • Horses
  • Writing
  • Medical technology
  • Automobiles
  • Phones
  • Airplanes
  • Internet

9
Cultural transmitters of knowledge
  • Songs
  • Dance
  • Oral traditions
  • Mythology
  • Religion
  • Science

10
Conflicts among cultural transmitters
  • Song, dance and oral traditions change in the
    telling and may share conflicting information
  • Mythologies can conflict
  • Religions can conflict
  • Science can conflicts
  • They can all conflict with each other but they
    are not all have the same explanatory power.

11
How does Science differ from other structures
that disseminate and advance knowledge?
  • Testable
  • Replicable
  • Falsifiable

Scientific knowledge is never set, never certain
and always growing.
12
Science The only objective method to the
advancement of knowledge.
  • Objective Treating or dealing with facts
    without distortion by personal feelings or
    prejudices
  • Subjective - Proceeding from or taking place in a
    person's mind rather than the external world
  • - Particular to a given person

13
Science and the study of mind
  • Other cultural traditions offer stable
    information on the mind
  • Science offers an uncertain account
  • Other explanations may feel warm and
    intuitively appealing
  • Scientific explanation may at first feel cold
  • Oxytocin the love drug
  • Scientific explanation for the mind is rich,
    elaborate and based on solid objective
    principles.
  • Scientific explanation for the mind is dynamic
    and continues to grow (which I find exciting).

14
Dialectic Progression of Ideas Hegel
flaws/alt idea
Thesis
Antithesis
Synthesis best of both
flaws/alt idea
New Thesis
15
Philosophical Roots
Rationalist Logic reasoning is key
Empiricist Experience observation is key
16
Cognitive Psychology Is
  • The study of how people perceive, learn,
    remember, and think about information.

Problem Solving
Decision Making
Memory
Attention
Intelligence
Language
Perception
17
Cognitive Methods
  • Experiments
  • Psychobiological studies
  • Self report
  • Case studies
  • Naturalistic Observation
  • Computer Simulations

18
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

19
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

20
Typical Dependent Variables
  • Reaction Time (milliseconds)
  • Mental events take time
  • Accuracy/Error analysis
  • How well the participant does on a task

21
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

22
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

23
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

24
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

25
Pop Quiz
26
25 Questions
  • Studies have shown that eyewitness testimony is
    valid and accurate, especially with highly
    stressful (i.e., memorable) events.
  • False -- Eyewitness testimony is notoriously
    unreliable, particularly when the observer is in
    a highly aroused state.
  • As of January 7, 2006 172 wrongly convicted
    prisoners have been released from death row
    because they were factually innocent of the
    crime. Most were committed on the basis of eye
    witness testimony.

27
25 Questions
  • We use only about 10 of our brain.
  • False -- We use all or our brain all the time.
    Even small brain lesions can result in
    significant cognitive impairment. The
    distributed neuronal cell loss with age amounts
    to up to 25 of the brain volume and accounts for
    many effects of cognitive aging.

28
25 Questions
  • Someone who learns something when they are drunk
    will subsequently remember it better when they
    are drunk than when they are sober.
  • True -- State dependent learning demonstrates the
    importance of the cognitive environment in the
    formation and retrieval of episodic memories.
    When there is a match between context, retrieval
    is good.

29
25 Questions
  • Studies of divided attention have demonstrated
    that driving while using a cell phone is not
    impaired.
  • False -- Studies show that using a cell phone
    significantly interferes with driving. In fact,
    several studies show that you are more impaired
    when driving and talking on a cell phone than
    when you are driving drunk.

30
25 Questions
  • Recent evidence supports some of the claims of
    Extra Sensory Perception (ESP) advocates.
  • False -- In controlled double-blinded studies,
    no systematic evidence has been obtained for
    ESP.

31
25 Questions
  • Memory aids do not really improve our memory.
  • False -- Mnemonic techniques work. They organize
    the information, make the material less
    susceptible to forgetting or interference, and
    provide a useful retrieval structure.

32
25 Questions
  • Backwards messages hidden in music influence our
    behavior.
  • eslaF -- There is no evidence that this
    information is processed, let alone influences
    our behavior.

33
25 Questions
  • Speed reading techniques can dramatically improve
    reading speed without sacrificing comprehension.
  • False -- Human performance is governed by the
    speed-accuracy tradeoff -- Going faster results
    in lower accuracy. However, good old fashioned
    practice can improve the efficiency of reading.

34
25 Questions
  • Freud's "free association" technique tells us
    something about the organization of memory.
  • True -- This is similar to the semantic priming
    studies with spreading activation. Individual
    differences can reflect enduring predispositions
    (or partial patterns of activation) that bias the
    semantic network in one way or another.

35
25 Questions
  • Information can be stored in long-term memory
    even if you never attended to it.
  • False -- Attention is necessary for the creation
    of long-term (and short-term) memories.
    Information that falls outside of attention is
    lost.

36
25 Questions
  • Advertising using subliminal perception is very
    effective.
  • False -- Effects of subliminal perception are, at
    best, minimal. There is little evidence that
    stimuli presented below the observers threshold
    influence motives, attitudes, beliefs, or choices.

37
25 Questions
  • We should try to avoid using heuristics (rules of
    thumb) during decision making.
  • False -- Heuristics help speed the decision
    making process and unburden working memory.
    However, these simplifying rules or short-cuts do
    create biases in decision making.

38
25 Questions
  • There is no basis for the claim that eating
    carrots will help your night vision
  • False -- The rods use the photopigment rhodopsin
    (which is made up of vitamin A, also found in
    carrots). People with a vitamin A deficiency can
    have poor night vision which can be corrected by
    supplemental vitamins.

39
25 Questions
  • Infants ability to discriminate between the
    phonemes of language is actually better than that
    of adults.
  • True -- As language develops, infants loose the
    ability to discriminate or produce phonemes that
    are not in their language.

40
25 Questions
  • There is no limit on how much information can be
    stored in long-term memory.
  • True -- No one has ever filled up long-term
    memory. There may be limits on what information
    is initially stored (attentional limitations),
    but once stored, the memories are permanent
    (although they may not be accessible).

41
25 Questions
  • People who are color blind are missing one or
    more types of cones in the retina
  • True -- Trichromatic theory suggests that normal
    color vision depends on three cone types with
    different colors made up by the ratio of
    activation of these receptors. However, some
    forms of color vision can also be due to damage
    to cortical areas.

42
25 Questions
  • The arrangement of displays and controls in cars,
    airplanes, etc. is arbitrary because we can learn
    to use any configuration with practice.
  • False -- There are some configurations that
    result in interference that simply cant be
    practiced away. It is up to Human Factors
    professionals to root out these bad design
    principles.

43
25 Questions
  • People are always biased.
  • True -- Our expectations and memories color the
    way that we perceive and remember the world.
    This accounts for many of the individual
    differences between people.

44
25 Questions
  • Practice always improves performance.
  • False -- Learning capitalizes on the statistical
    regularities of the environment. Most of the
    time there are consistencies in the environment
    that facilitate learning, but in some cases there
    are irregularities or inconsistencies that impede
    learning.

45
25 Questions
  • Our expectations influence our perceptions and
    memories.
  • True -- Expectations and other top-down
    processes play a major role in what we perceive
    and remember. Often, differences in what two
    observers see or remember are due to the effects
    of top down processing.

46
25 Questions
  • The difference between 500 and 1000 is
    psychologically greater than the difference
    between 10,500 and 11,000.
  • True -- The mental representation of magnitude is
    compressed at the high end of the scale. 500 vs.
    1000 is a greater psychological difference than
    10500 vs. 11000

47
25 Questions
  • If someone is blind in one eye, they will have no
    depth perception.
  • False -- There are pictorial cues (e.g., size,
    interposition, etc) and movement cues that
    provide depth information. The use of both eyes
    provides binocular cues -- random dot stereograms
    make use of binocular visual information.

48
25 Questions
  • With enough practice it is possible to do two
    things at the same time as well as doing each
    thing by itself.
  • True -- Under very specific task combinations,
    people can do two things (playing piano and
    reading a novel) as well as either in isolation.
    This is called Perfect Timesharing.

49
25 Questions
  • During the movement of the eyes while reading,
    the processing of visual information is
    temporarily suppressed.
  • True -- This is called saccadic suppression. Not
    only is the processing of visual information
    suppressed, but higher level cognitive thoughts
    also appear to be put on hold.

50
25 Questions
  • It is possible to have a permanent memory that
    influences your behavior even though you are not
    consciously aware of that memory.
  • True -- The distinction between implicit and
    explicit memory suggests that implicit memory is
    very important to out everyday behavior, even
    though we may be unaware of these memories.
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