Title: Cognitive Neuropsychology
1Cognitive Neuropsychology
- WELCOME TO THE COURSE
- Some useful info
- Outline course structure / content
- Sort out seminar groups / times
- Make a start on the material
2Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Useful Info
- Lecturers Sam Hutton Brendan Weekes
- Contact info samh_at_sussex, b.s.weekes_at_sussex
- My office is JMS 5D15- office hours Monday
1030-1200 - Course Website
- www.lifesci.sussex.ac.uk/teaching/C8517/
- PLEASE CHECK THIS SITE REGULARLY
- Course structure 2 Lectures a week . 1 Seminar
(two hours) in weeks 2,4,6 and 8.
3TIMETABLE
4Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Reading
- Background Listen to the 2003 Reith Lectures
- www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/reith2003
- Course Textbook Rapp, B (2000) The Handbook of
Cognitive Neuropsychology - Other useful books Parkin, AJ (1998)
Explorations in Cognitive Neuropsychology. Ellis
Young (1996) Human Cognitive Neuropsychology. - In the final year you must read beyond the
textbook use it as an introduction to other
primary sources (e.g. journal articles) not as a
substitute.
5Cognitive Neuropsychology
- What is it?
- Cognitive Psychology The study of the mental
processes used in everyday life. - Based on an analogy between the mind and the
digital computer -the information processing
approach. - Assumptions
- Cognition can be understood by analysing it in
terms of a series of (mainly) sequential stages - During these stages information (representations
/ symbols) is acted upon by processes - This takes time (so predictions about RT can be
made) - The mind is a limited capacity processor.
6Cognitive Neuropsychology
- What is it?
- Cognitive Psychology The study of the mental
processes used in everyday life. - Based on an analogy between the mind and the
digital computer -the information processing
approach. - Key Questions
- What are the stages through which information is
processed? - In what form is information represented in the
human mind?
7Cognitive Neuropsychology
- What is it?
- Neuropsychology The study of the relationship
between brain and behaviour. - A (very) brief history
- Extension of localisationist approach to human
sciences that began in the Renaissance. - Phrenology was one early result (Spurzheim /
Gall) - Golden age of Neuropsychology 1860-1905 Broca
Wernicke etc - Rise of both behaviourism and psychoanalytical
approach led to decline ideas of
equipotentiality and mass-action dominant until
1950s - Neuropsychology re-emerged as a more well defined
discipline in the 1980s.
8Cognitive Neuropsychology
- What is it?
- Neuropsychology The study of the relationship
between brain and behaviour. - This definition is very broad includes
psychopharmacology, behavioural genetics,
non-cognitive behaviour (feeding / locomotion
etc) - So definition is usually restricted to concern
studies that examine the effects of brain damage
on behaviour. - Neuropsychology is cognitive to the extent that
it purports to clarify the mechanisms of
cognitiev function such as thinking, reading,
writing, speaking, recognising or remembering,
using evidence from neuropathology Campbell,
1987. - Cognitive Neuropsychology can be thought of as a
subdiscipline of Cognitive Psychology
9Relation to other disciplines
- What is it?
- Cognitive Science
- Develops computational models of cognition (often
to simulate the results of experiments) - Experimental Cognitive Psychology
- Empirical, behavioural data from controlled
studies using healthy participants - Cognitive Neuropsychology
- Studes of brain damaged patients to inform models
of healthy cognition - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry
- Studies of specific symptoms in patients with
psychiatric / neurological disorders - Cognitive Neuroscience
- Neural basis of behaviour in animals often maps
neural activity onto function - Behavioural Neurology
- Uses data concerning anatomy and physiology of
CNS to guide interpretations of disordered
behaviour due to neural damage.
10Cognitive Neuropsychology vsClinical
Neuropsychology
- Both disciplines are intimately linked, but
differ significantly in emphasis. - Both focus on the effects of brain damage on
psychological processes - Aims of Clinical Neuropsychology are
- Determine Pathology
- Characterise Deficit
- Establish baseline levels of performance
- Aims of Cognitive Neuropsychology are
- understand effects of brain damage in terms of
disruptions to a model of healthy cognitive
function - Use information from patients with brain damage
to constrain models of healthy cognitive function.
11Cognitive Neuropsychology
In any well made machine one is ignorant of the
working of most of the parts the better they
work, the less we are conscious of them it is
only a fault which draws attention to the
mechanism at all Craik, 1943
Cognitive Neuropsychology rests on a number of
important assumptions about the relationship
between brain and behaviour
12What can we conclude about how the printer works
from this output?