Cognitive Psychology, 2 nd Ed. Chapter 1. Defining Cognitive Psychology The study of human mental...

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Cognitive Psychology, 2nd Ed.

Chapter 1

Defining Cognitive Psychology

The study of human mental processes and their role in thinking, feeling, and behaving.Experimentation versus mathematical models and computer simulations.Information processing—the mind is analogous to the software of a computer and the brain to its hardware.

Information processing

Information as a reduction of uncertainty (h = log2N).

Meaning, not information in the mathematical sense, is the focus of human mental life.

Defining Cognitive Science

The study of the relationships among and integration of cognitive psychology, biology, anthropology, computer science, linguistics, and philosophy.These disciplines bring different methodologies to common questions.

Core Concepts

Mental representationStages of processingSerial versus parallel processingHierarchical systemsCognitive architectureMemory storesConsciousness

Mental representation

An unobservable internal code for information.Mental images are one kind of mental representation.Other kinds are unconscious and abstract.Provide the basis for all cognitive abilities and knowledge about the world.

Stages of processing

Processes modify mental representations in a series of stages.Encoding, storage, and retrieval are stages of processing in memory, for example.

Serial versus Parallel Processing

At a given stage of processing, cognitive operations may be either serial or parallel.Simultaneous operations are parallel not serial.Is retrieval from memory serial or parallel?

Hierarchical Systems

Mind as a hierarchy of component parts analogous to bodily systems.Nervous system divides into peripheral and central branch. Peripheral divides into autonomic and sensory, etc.Mind divides into perception, memory, and motor output. Memory divides into sensory, short-term, and long-term. Long-term divides into declarative and nondeclarative.

Consciousness

Self-knowledge—knowledge of self in addition to knowledge of objects, events, and ideas external to self.Informational access—capacity to be become aware of and able to report on mental representations and processes.Sentience—capacity for raw sensations, feelings, and subjective experience.

Research Methods

Behavioral measures—reaction time and proportion of errors.Verbal protocols—concurrent, think aloud protocols or other verbal reports.Physiological measures—EEG, ERP, PET, fMRI.

Method of Subtraction

Used to isolate the properties of a single stage of processing.Assumption of pure insertion:

Control-Stages 1 and 2 Experimental-Stages 1, 2, and 3 Adding 3 does not affect 1 and 2

Strong Theories of Cognition

Account for a large number phenomena with as few assumptions as possible.Are based on ecologically valid experiments.Are based on converging evidence including behavioral, verbal reports, physiological, and mathematical models/computer simulations.

Cognitive Architectures

Symbolic modelsDesign of digital computerSymbolic representationsLocal representationsSerial processing

Connectionist modelsStructure of brainAssociations among simple unitsDistributed representationsParallel processing

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