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Cognitive Psychology

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Title: Cognitive Psychology


1
Cognitive Psychology
  • Chapter 3

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Visual Consciousness
  • Transduction of the visible spectrum (400 nm to
    700 nm) of electromagnetic radiation.
  • Crossing of the visual pathways from retina to
    primary visual. Left visual field
  • represented in right hemisphere.

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Visual Consciousness
  • A critical periods for cortical development in
    cats show that primary visual cortex is necessary
    for visual consciousness.
  • Blindsight in humans Damage to primary visual
    cortex eliminates visual consciousness but a
    second pathway allows accurate discrimination.

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Types of Agnosia
  • Apperceptive Agnosia object recognition fails
    because of difficulties in identifying the visual
    features of a perceptual category.
  • Associative agnosia object recognition fails
    because of difficulties in identifying the
    functional features that define a semantic
    category.

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Pattern Recognition
  • Refers to the step between the transduction and
    perception of a stimulus in the environment and
    its categorization as a meaningful object.
  • Agnosiafailure of pattern recognition caused by
    brain lesions.

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Top-down vs. Bottom-up Processes
  • Organized knowledge representations called
    schemas direct exploration of objects and events
    in the environment.
  • Conceptually-driven processes provide
    expectations from the top-down.
  • Data-driven processes sample features from the
    bottom-up.

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Word Superiority Effect
  • WORK vs. ORWK vs. K
  • Surprisingly, a single letter (K) is recognized
    faster in the context of a whole word (WORK) than
    when presented as an isolated letter. A nonword
    (ORWK) doesnt provide this top-down advantage.

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How are objects represented?
  • Distinctive feature lists may suffice for printed
    letters (Z is detected faster here OQBZPD than
    here TLKZMV).
  • But the structural relations among features are
    often as important as the features themselves.

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Face Perception
  • Holistic vs. Analytic Processing
  • Faces are unique in that holistic processing is
    much stronger than analytic processing for them
    as compared with other objects.

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Speech Recognition
  • Phonological segments that signal meaning
    (phonemes) unfold at 12/s or more. Fast,
    effortless processing of 40,000 bits/s implies a
    speech module.
  • The structural relations among phonemesthe
    context in which a phoneme occursis critical to
    recognition.

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Why context is important?
  • Co-articulation Each segment of speech provides
    clues about more than one phoneme. That is,
    multiple phonemes are articulated at the same
    time.

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Why context is important?
  • Co-articulation Each segment of speech provides
    clues about more than one phoneme.
  • Phonemes lack invariant distinctive features

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Top Down Processing
  • Phonological segments are continuous in speech.
    Pauses heard are often illusions constructed by
    imposing phonemes from the top.
  • Subtle variations are ignored unless they fall at
    phoneme boundaries (categorical speech
    perception).

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