Title: Cognitive Psychology
1Cognitive Psychology
- Part III
- Some research areas within Cognitive Psychology
2- Categorization
- Representation
- Memory
- Attention
3Categorization
- The process by which distinct entities are
treated as equivalent (Medin Aguilar, 1999)
4(No Transcript)
5(No Transcript)
6Categorization(Categorical Perception)
- Partitioning a continuous physical spectrum into
discrete categories
7Color Perception
8Why categories?
- The world is very complex.
- We cannot keep track of every individual item in
the world we must group similar things
together. - We cannot process all information available to us
we must selectively attend to what is important
to us (what is important for making these
groupings).
9Some questions about categories
- What information and processes do we use to form
categories? - How does using categories affect our perception
and behavior?
10Representation
- How is information represented in the mind?
11What is a mental representation?
- A systematic correspondence between some element
of a target domain and some element of a modeling
(or representation) domain.
12For example
Target domain (real world)
Model domain (representation)
13- The target contains 3 rectangles.
- The model contains 3 sets of dots.
- The relevant structure in the target is the
height of the rectangles. - The relevant structure in the model is the number
of dots (height, width is irrelevant). - Systematic correspondence is that the number of
dots increases as the height of the rectangle
increases.
14An alternative
20 4 8
Target domain (real world)
Model domain (representation)
15And another
A C B
Target domain (real world)
Model domain (representation)
16Possible representations
- Symbols Representations are amodal they bear
no necessary resemblance to the concept or
percept they represent. The systematic
correspondence between the two domains may be a
matter of convention (only). - Like variables in algebra, the words dog, Hund,
sabaka and gau2, or the numerals 20, 4, and
8, or A, B, and C, for the rectangles in the
rectangle example.
17Possible representations
- Images Representations resemble what they
represent in some non-arbitrary way. The
systematic correspondence between the two domains
is iconic. - e.g. photographs, maps, caricatures, the number
of dots for height (number of cm), etc.
18Symbols vs. Images
- It seems almost obvious that some things might be
represented as images - visual percepts
- It seems less obvious that other things are
represented as images - abstract concepts The feeling of being tired of
hearing about brown dogs.
- Some things seem to fall somewhere in between.
- The concept of dog (not a particular dog, but
dogness in general).
19Evidence for mental images
- Pictures of abstract 3D objects.
- Object-matching task Are these two objects the
same or not? - On correct same responses, subject took longer
when there was a greater angle of rotation
between the two objects. - This suggests they were rotating the images until
they matched up in their minds eye. - (From Shepard Metzler, 1971)
20More evidence of mental imagery
- Property-listing task Name all the properties
you can think of that are true of
- Watermelon
- Green, round, heavy, buy them in the summer, etc.
- Half of a watermelon
- Pink, has seeds, wet, sweet, heavy, etc.
- Responses depend in part on imagery.
- (From Wu, 1995, cited in Goldstone Barsalou,
1998)
21Mental representations
- Cognitive psychologists (mostly) agree that
- Human information processing depends on the
mental representation of information. - But they disagree (frequently) on
- What is the nature of mental representations?
22Memory
- What processes and representations are involved
in the storage and retrieval of information?
23How many numbers can you remember?
1 4 9 2 1 7 7 6 1 8 4 1 1 9 9 7
- The magical number 7 2 (Miller, 1956)
1492 1776 1841 1997
- Chunking, schemas, and elaboration
24Schemas
- Person Schemas we use personality categories to
classify people and these often lead us to infer
properties that arent present (prejudices,
stereotypes). - Also Event and Place Schemas.
- Dining in a restaurant
- Lecturers office
25Example
- What
- objects are
- in this
- office?
- Brewer
- Treyens, 1981
26Schemas can affect memories
- Subjects spent less than a minute in the room.
- Most recalled a chair and a desk.
- About 1/3 recalled books.
- There were no books in the office.
27Attention
- Selecting the right information from the world.
28Automatic vs. Controlled processing
- Automatic
- Involuntary
- Fast
- Effortless
- Controlled
- Voluntary
- Slower
- Takes effort
- Automatized
- More automatic
- Faster
- Takes less effort
29Stroop Effect
30Stroop Effect
Wish Bird Mouse Phone Ear
Shoe Hat Hand Bag Pin
Screen Face Card Wire Dog
31Stroop Effect
- Red
- Yellow
- Blue
- Green
- Blue
Blue Blue Yellow Blue Yellow
Green Red Green Yellow Red
Yellow Green Red Red Green
After Stroop (1935) and Coren Ward (1989)
32Next Week
- Perception
- Top-down vs. Bottom-up Processing
- Perception and categorization
- Please look at
- Papathomas, T. V. (1999). The brain as a
hypothesis-constructing-and-testing agent. In
Lepore, E. Pylyshyn, Z. (Eds.) What is
Cognitive Science (pp. 230-247). Oxford,
Blackwell.
33Bibliography
- Barsalou, L. W. Cognitive Psychology An Overview
for Cognitive Scientists. Hillsdale, NJ,
Lawrence Erlbaum and Associates. - Coren, S. Ward, L. M. (1989). Sensation and
Perception, Third Edition. Fort Worth, NJ,
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. - Goldstone, R. L., Barsalou, L. W. (1998).
Reuniting perception and conception. Cognition,
65, 231-262. - Lee, Y.-S., Vakoch, D. A., Wurm, L. H. (1996).
Tone perception in Cantonese and Mandarin A
cross-linguistic comparison. Journal of
Psycholinguistic Research, 25, 527-542. - Medin, D. L. Aguilar, C. (1999).
Categorization. In Wilson, R. A. Keil, F. C.
(Eds.) The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive
Sciences (pp. 104-106). Robert A. Wilson and
Frank C. Keil. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press. - Miller, G. A. (1956). The magical number seven
plus or minus two Some limits on our capacity
for processing information. Psychological
Review, 63, 81-97. - Shepard, R. N., Metzler, J. Mental rotation of
three-dimensional objects. Science, 171,
701-703. - Stroop, J. (1935). Studies of interference in
serial verbal reactions. Journal of Experimental
Psychology, 18, 624-643. - Wu, L., (1995). Perceptual Representation in
Conceptual Combination. Doctoral dissertation,
University of Chicago