Title: Cognitive Psychology
1Cognitive Psychology
- Scope, assumptions, and methods
2Cognitive Psychology
- Field of psychology focused on understanding the
process of thinking - The study of human mental processes and their
role in thinking, feeling, and behaving
3Cognitive Psychology
- Encompasses a wide range of mental processes
including - Perception, attention, and memory
- Intelligence, Language, Reasoning,
Problem-Solving, Decision-Making - Creativity
4Cognitive Psychology
- An important contributor to the interdisciplinary
field of cognitive science - Cognitive science is the study of intelligence
and intelligent systems - Cognitive science draws on knowledge from
cognitive psychology, linguistics, computer
science, neuroscience, and philosophy
5Cognitive Psychology
- A relatively new discipline that has "come of
age" - Exerts a strong influence on the broader
discipline of psychology - Psychological specialties such as clinical,
counseling, developmental, health, and social
psychology draw heavily on cognitive
psychological concepts
6Historical foundations of Cognitive Psychology
- As is the case with psychology in general,
cognitive psychology has a "short history but a
long past" - The long past refers to the historical
foundations of psychology itself, beginning with
the Greek philosophers and including the views of
rationalism, empiricism, structuralism,
functionalism, associationism, and behaviorism
7Historical foundations of Cognitive Psychology
- The predominate force in academic psychology
during the first half of the 20th century was
behaviorism ("the great white rat era") - The belief was that psychology should deal only
with publicly observable and therefore measurable
behavior.
8Historical foundations of Cognitive Psychology
- The short history of cognitive psychology begins
in the 1950s, with the occurrence of the
cognitive revolution, a fundamental shift in
psychology's approach to explaining behavior - A number of factors, many associated with WWII,
were responsible for bringing about this
revolution
9Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Psychologists assisting in the war effort on
tasks such as improving marksmanship, efficient
piloting, surveillance, monitoring,
code-breaking - Understanding these activities required concepts
beyond those offered by behaviorism
10Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Disappointment/Disenchantment with the
behaviorist approach - Complex behavior could not be readily explained
using only terms and concepts such as stimulus,
response, and reinforcement
11Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Neo-Behaviorists willing to "peek into the black
box" - Edward Tolman
Cognitive maps, Purposive behavior
12Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Gestalt psychology
- Kohler, Wertheimer
- The whole is different than the sum of its
parts Importance of perception
13Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- New knowledge from the field of linguistics
- Chomsky showed that behaviorism could not
explain the acquisition and use of language.
14Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- New knowledge regarding memory and distinct
memory systems - output (recall) often does not accurately
reflect input.
15Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- New discoveries about the brain
- Lashley Equipotentiality
- Hebb Cell assemblies
16Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Research on cognitive development
- Piaget showed qualitative rather than
quantitative changes in the development of mental
abilities
17Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Development of Human Factors and Communications
Fields - Limited-capacity processor view
- Communications terminology (channel,
operator, etc)
18Factors contributing toThe Cognitive Revolution
- Advances in computer technology
- information-processing approach (input,
output, algorithms, etc) - artificial intelligence
19The birth of a new discpline Cognitive Psychology
- September 1956, MIT Symposium
- 1967, Neisser published "Cognitive Psychology.
The first textbook for the new field. - "the floodgates holding back the many pressures
of consciousness and subjectivity were suddenly
opened"
20Cognitive Psychology
- By taking this course you will be engaging in one
of humankind's greatest quests - the mind seeking to understand the mind
21The focus of this course
- The science of mental life as defined by
contemporary research methods, theories, and
findings.
22Research methods of Cognitive Psychology
- Introspection
- Verbal protocols / Self-report
- Behaviorial measures
- Reaction time (RT)
- Error rate
- Physiological measures
- Psychophysiological
- Neuroimaging
23Research methods of Cognitive Psychology
- Computer simulation
- Goal is to produce human-like processing
- Artificial intelligence
- Goal is to create most efficient processing
- It is common and fruitful for multiple methods to
be applied to any given research question
24Research Strategies of Cognitive Psychology
- Populations studied
- People with typical cognitive abilities
- People with impaired cognitive abilities
- People with known neurological impairment
- New trend studies of animal cognition
25Core concepts in Cognitive Psychology
- The information processing approach
- Assumes that the mind is a processor of
information, computing answers in a manner
similar to a computer - Assumes that all thoughts are calculations
26Core concepts in Cognitive Psychology
- Mental representation
- An unobservable internal code for information
that is different from and greater than the
physical representation - Provides the basis for all cognitive abilities
- "All that you know OF the world and your only
basis for acting ON the world, is found in your
mental representations"
27Core concepts in Cognitive Psychology
- Stages of processing
- The basic assumption that mental representations
are created, modified, and used through a series
of stages - Tied to the information processing approach
- Rationale for use of the subtraction method
28Core concepts in Cognitive Psychology
- Serial vs parallel processing
- Questions whether the "stages" of processing
occur sequentially or simultaneously - Tied to the connectionist or PDP approach
- Rationale for use of computer simulation and
mathematical modeling
29Core concepts in Cognitive Psychology
- Ecological validity
- Artificiality of experimental stimuli
- Ecological validity
- Artificiality of experimental tasks
- Ecological validity
- Possibility of affective interference in
laboratory settings, esp physiological testings
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31Descriptions Explanations in Cognitive
Psychology
- Behavioral
- Provide valuable descriptions but no explanation
- Cognitive
- Provide theoretical explanations
- Physical
- Provide a physiological link between a behavior
and its cognitive explanation
32Descriptions Explanations in Cognitive
Psychology
- Metaphors
- Attempt to explain human behavior by comparing it
to a known physical process - Theories
- Attempt to explain behavior in terms of
unobservable hypothetical mental processes - Models
- Attempt to provide visual illustrations linking
the hypothetical mental processes with behavior
33Explaining attentional deficits in schizophrenia
- Metaphorical explanation
- "The leaky filter hypothesis"
- Theoretical explanation
- "The inhibitory deficit theory"
- A Model
34What you will learn in this class
- Basic organization function of the brain
- Fundamental cognitive processes perception,
attention, and MEMORY - Higher-level processes Problem-Solving,
Decision-Making, Language, and Creativity - Individual differences development, gender,
culture, psych/neuro impairment