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The media and cognitive information processing

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Title: The media and cognitive information processing


1
The media and cognitive information processing
  • Theory and research in cognitive effects of the
    mass media

2
Psychology
  • One of the great questions is How do we think?
  • It involves the mind-body duality
  • It relates to human ascendance and mastery
  • It presents us with a powerful tool for good or
    ill

3
  • Psychologists have struggled with the question
    since the inception of the discipline
  • One early group of psychologists tried to
    determine what goes on inside the mind
  • Methods of introspection
  • Freudianism

4
  • Another group declared that only behavior that
    the researcher could see was an appropriate
    domain of research
  • Experimentation
  • Watson/Behaviorism

5
New emphasis on the black box
  • Beginning in the late 1950s and accelerating
    through the 60s and 70s, a paradigm known as
    cognitive information processing developed
  • Rejected behaviorisms rules limiting acceptable
    study to observable behavior
  • However, tried to use more traditional scientific
    methods to study what goes on inside peoples
    heads

6
Cognitive information processing
  • An attempt to map the inner workings of the brain
    using carefully constructed experiments and
    scientific techniques
  • Experimental studies
  • Memory studies
  • Physiological measures (more recent)
  • Brain imaging
  • Case studies of people with mental disorders
  • Brain damage

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Cognitive information processing
  • Combination of three influences
  • Computers/information processing
  • Information theory
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Dominant paradigm in current psychological theory
    and research

9
A number of recurrent findings
  • Limited capacity
  • Different kinds of memories
  • Visual
  • Auditory
  • Meaning (semantic)
  • Ability to recall memories from childhood, etc.
    during brain surgery
  • Brain damage in certain areas leads to short-term
    memory loss, etc.

10
Recurrent findings
  • Automatic reactions to light, loud sound, etc.
  • Ability to focus attention on certain things
  • Impact on memory
  • Similar mistakes made in tasks
  • Sources of confusion, distraction
  • Forgetting

11
Major approaches
  • Structures approach
  • Process approach
  • Schematic approach

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Series of actions
  • Perception
  • Sensory reaction
  • Human limitations/abilities
  • Pattern matching
  • Comparison with stored information to identify
    objects, words, etc.

15
Sensory limitations
  • Wolfen

16
Pattern recognition
17
Pattern recognition
  • Apocalypse Now

18
Dual processing
  • Sound and visual information are encoded
    separately but simultaneously
  • If they are mutually supportive memory is
    enhanced
  • If they are contradictory or just unrelated,
    memory for the content may be reduced

19
  • Rehearsal
  • Repetition
  • Elaborative rehearsal
  • Encoding
  • Laying down a memory trace
  • Primacy/recency
  • Trace strength (intensity)
  • Schematization

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Schema
  • Most CIP theorists argue that networks of
    concepts are maintained in memory
  • These networks develop as the individual grows
    and gains experience, learns, etc.
  • Each individual develops a unique set of schema

22
  • Knowledge acquisition is guided by existing
    schema
  • What to pay attention to
  • What the new information is related to
  • What the object of attention means
  • Action is guided by schema

23
  • Retrieval
  • Matching current information with stored
    information
  • Memory loss may be inability to find information
    rather than actual decay
  • Ability to effectively match stored info and new
    info crucial
  • Interpretation is the effectiveness of matching
  • Must have appropriate and well-formed schema in
    memory to draw upon

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Attention
  • Attention is the allocation of processing effort
  • Attention is crucial for moving information
    through the series of transformations necessary
    to remember and use information
  • Without attention, there will be no consciousness
    or memory of experience, no response, no reasoning

26
Attention allocation
  • Attention can be allocated either automatically
    or intentionally
  • Certain stimuli draw attention without conscious
    intent on the part of the audience member
  • Novelty, intensity, movement, danger
  • Other stimuli draw attention based on interests,
    needs, etc. of the audience member
  • Ranges from conscious control to relatively
    automatic

27
Automatic attention
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  • Other stimuli draw attention based on interests,
    needs, etc. of the audience member
  • Ranges from conscious control to relatively
    automatic
  • Most such attention allocation is based on
    personal relevance, likely impact on yourself or
    valued others, moral implications, emotionality
    or personal interest

29
Personal relevance
  • Relation to your background, demographic
    characteristics, life history
  • For example, a story about Kentucky may hold
    special interest for Kentuckians
  • Ratings for television shows are significantly
    higher in towns they portray
  • Drew Carey in Chicago
  • Designing Women in Atlanta
  • Fargo

30
Likely impact
  • This is probably most clearly tied to news
  • National v. local
  • Local news watchers often are interested in
    socially rather unimportant events
  • Local sports
  • Graduations
  • Traffic accidents
  • Weather
  • News is supposed to provide information that
    allows the public to make wise democratic choices
  • Its success is hotly debated

31
Moral implications
  • When your values are implicated in a cop story,
    news, reality show, etc., you are more likely to
    attend to the content

32
Emotionality
  • Portrayal of some emotional content draws fairly
    automatic attention, while other types are
    learnedwell address this later in the semester
  • Fight or flight emotions
  • Social emotions

33
Personal interest
  • Nature v. nurture
  • Personal experience generates unique schema that
    influence attention
  • May develop a taste for rap music or for
    orchestral music
  • May gain a taste for science-fiction
  • Childhood experience may generate a positive
    attitude toward books, reading, etc. and help the
    child learn to focus on plot, etc.

34
Personal interest
  • Topical
  • Sports narratives v. romance v. horror

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Personal background
  • Attention is directed by existing knowledge and
    interests
  • Based on genetics and/or experience
  • Individual differences are probably more heavily
    related to experience
  • Interests
  • Personal needs/life stage
  • Generational experience

43
  • New information is encoded more easily if a
    well-formed schema is available that relates to
    the new informationwill tend to draw attention
    to new information that corresponds to existing
    knowledge
  • Likely source of much of the selectivity (limited
    effects) findings

44
Schema
  • The schema chosen to interpret the new
    information largely determine its meaning
  • People will interpret the same content in
    different ways
  • Meaning is at least somewhat individual
  • Through the socialization process, people learn
    similar schemas for topic domains

45
Schema
  • When the audience member applies a schema unlike
    that of the producer to a text, she is often said
    to have misinterpreted or distorted the
    meaning of the text
  • If we look at it differently, it is simply a case
    of meaning formation like any other

46
Long-term memory
  • Once the information has been interpreted, it
    enters into long-term memory in the adjusted
    schema
  • The information may be retrieved in response to
    new information in the working memory that is
    determined to be related to it

47
  • The likelihood of being retrieved varies with
  • Recency of activation
  • Frequency of activation
  • Strength of memory trace
  • Related concepts in schema

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