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The Cognitive Science Approach

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Title: The Cognitive Science Approach


1
Chapter 2
  • The Cognitive Science Approach

2
Guiding Principles
  • Our metatheory is the information processing
    approach
  • Cognition equals the coordinated operation of
    active mental processes within a multi component
    memory system.

3
Seven Themes of Cognition
  • Attention
  • Automatic versus conscious processing
  • Data-driven versus conceptually driven processing
  • Representation
  • Implicit versus explicit memory
  • Metacognition
  • Brain

4
Seven Themes of Cognition
5
Time and Accuracy Measures
  • Reaction Time
  • A measure of the time elapsed between some
    stimulus and the persons response to the
    stimulus (RT).
  • Almost always measured in milliseconds.

6
Vocal Reaction Times to Multiplication Problems
7
Time and Accuracy Measures
  • Accuracy
  • Often we are interested instead in some measure
    of peoples accuracy.
  • The earliest use of accuracy as a measure of
    mental processes was the seminal work by
    Ebbinghaus, published in 1885.

8
Serial position curves, showing the decrease in
accuracy at the end of the list when 0, 10, or 30
s of backward counting intervenes between study
and recall.
9
Analogies
  • The channel capacity analogy
  • Like a telephone wire, humans are
    limited-capacity information processors.
  • The computer analogy
  • Human information processing may be similar to
    the way computers work.

10
The Standard Theory
  • The Atkinson and Shiffrin Model of Human Memory
  • Three memory components sensory memory,
    short-term memory, and long-term memory.

11
The Standard Theory of Human Information
Processing
  • The Atkinson and Shiffrin Model

12
Process Models
  • A hypothesis about the specific mental processes
    that take place when a particular task is
    performed.

13
The Lexical Decision Task
  • Yes or no, do the following letter strings form
    valid English words?
  • 1) Robin _____
  • 2) Manty _____
  • 3) Nurse ______
  • 4) Trock ______

14
A Process Model of the Lexical Decision Task
  • Encode
  • Search
  • Decide
  • Respond

15
A Process Model of the Lexical Decision Task
16
Assumptions of Strict Information Processing
  • Sequential stages of processing
  • Independent and non-overlapping stages of
    processing

17
Difficulties of Strict Information Processing
  • Solid evidence exists for parallel processing,
    e.g. Typing
  • Context effects, e.g. Semantic Priming
  • Not useful for studying complex cognition (e.g.,
    problem solving tasks) and tasks with slower RTs

18
Context Effects
  • Count the number of Fs in the following
    sentence (Warning This is harder than it looks)
  • Finished files are the result of years of
    scientific study combined with the experience of
    many years.

19
Top-Down Processing
  • AKA Conceptually-driven processing
  • When existing context has an influence on earlier
    or simpler forms of mental processes
  • In the finished files example, reading is so
    automatic that youve learned to ignore function
    words like of-- an example of top down
    processing.

20
Updating the Standard Theory
21
Neurocognition
  • Dissociation A disruption in one component of
    memory but no impairment of another.
  • Simple versus double dissociations
  • Lack of dissociation an association

22
Neurons
23
Neuron Anatomy
  • Soma
  • Nucleus
  • Dendrite
  • Myelin Sheath
  • Aborizations
  • Terminal Buttons
  • Axon
  • Axon Hillock
  • Receptor cells / sensory neurons
  • Effector cells / motor neurons
  • Interneuron
  • Synapse
  • Neurotransmitters

24
Brain Anatomy
TOP
FRONT
  • BACK

25
Brain AnatomyLower Brain Structures
26
Brain Anatomy (cont.)
  • Three other subcortical (below the neocortext)
    structures are especially important to
    neurocognition
  • thalamus the gateway to the cortex almost
    all messages entering the cortex come through
    the thalamus
  • corpus callosum the primary bridge across
    which messages pass between the left and right
    halves or hemispheres of the neocortex
  • hippocampus an internal brain structure
    strongly implicated in the storing of new
    information into long-term memory

27
Four Lobes of the Neocortex
28
Brain Anatomy
  • Corpus Callosum
  • Thalamus
  • Hypothalamus
  • Pituitary
  • Hippocampus
  • Amygdala
  • Medulla
  • Cerebral Cortex
  • Frontal Lobe
  • Parietal Lobe
  • Occipital Lobe
  • Temporal Lobe

29
Principles of Function
  • Contralaterality
  • The receptor and control centers for one side of
    the body are in the opposite hemisphere of the
    brain.

30
Brain Anatomy
31
Principles of Function
  • Hemispheric Specialization
  • Different brain functions tend to rely more
    heavily on one hemisphere or the other.
  • Example The left hemisphere controls language
    for most right-handed people.

32
The two hemispheres of the brain are connected by
a band of fibers called the corpus callosum
33
Split-Brain Patients
  • Severed corpus callosum to stop epileptic
    seizures
  • No obvious problems at first
  • Laboratory testing revealed some problems
  • Remember

34
Left visual field projects to right hemisphere R
ight visual field projects to left hemisphere
35
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36
Split Brain Research
  • Sperry -- severed corpus callosums of people with
    severe epilepsy.
  • How does Sperrys research support the idea that
    the left hemisphere processes language?

37
Split-Brain Research and Lateralization
  • Research on split-brain patients
  • Principle of lateralization

38
Methods of Investigation
  • Lesions Used by Sperry the site and extent of
    the brain lesion are important guides to the kind
    of disruption in behavior that is observed and
    vice versa.
  • Direct Stimulation Pioneered by Penfield the
    patient in brain surgery remained conscious
    during surgery and was administered minute
    electrical charges to the exposed brain, thus
    triggering very small regions.

39
Exposed cortex of one of Penfields patients
40
Methods of Investigation (cont.)
  • Imaging Technology
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Gives clear
    pictures of the structure of the brain.
  • Functional MRI Image shows regions of the brain
    with heightened neural activity, with different
    colors reflecting high or low levels of blood
    flow, oxygen uptake, and the like.

41
Methods of Investigation (cont.)
  • Electrocephalograms (EEG) Electrodes are
    attached to the subjects scalp, and the device
    records the patterns of brain waves.
  • Event-Related Potentials The momentary changes
    in electrical activity of the brain when a
    particular stimulus is presented to the subject.

42
Event Related Potential (ERP)
43
Parallel Distributed Processing
44
Neural Net Models
  • AKA Parallel distributed processing, or
    connectionist models.
  • Contain a system of interconnected nodes, with
    knowledge represented by the interconnections
    between units.
  • Processing in the model is massively parallel.

45
Brain vs. Computer
  • 100 billion neurons (1012)
  • Clock speed 1KHz
  • of processors ???
  • Equivalent MIPS 100 million (1014)
  • 100 million transistors (109)
  • Clock speed 3 GHz (3x1012)
  • of processors 2
  • Equivlent MIPS 10,000 (1011)

Brain 1000x faster (for now)
46
Summary of Major Topics Covered in Chapter 2
  • Measuring information processing
  • The information processing approach
  • The modern cognitive approach
  • Neurocognition
  • Neural Net Models
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