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Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons www.psychlotron .org.uk

Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

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Page 1: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Contemporary Issues

The Cognitive Approach

Aidan Sammonswww.psychlotron.org.uk

Page 2: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Contemporary Issues

‘Students should be able to…explain one contemporary issue or debate using terminology or ideas drawn from the cognitive approach’.

Edexcel AS Psychology Specification

Identify key concepts from the approach

Be able to explain them

Be able to apply them to real world situations or problems

Page 3: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Cognitive Concepts Information processingSchema driven processingReconstructive memoryFalse memory syndrome

Page 4: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Information Processing

OutputInput Processing

Storage

Page 5: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Input Processes

Keyboard Mouse Scanner Camera Microphone

Vision Hearing Touch Smell Taste

Computer Mind

Page 6: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Output Processes

Screen Projector Printer Loudspeaker

Behaviour Speech

Computer Mind

Page 7: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Human Information Processing

BehaviourSenses Cognition

Memory

Page 8: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Cognitive Processes

Perception:

interpreting incoming sensory

information

Attention:

selecting information for further processing

Thinking:

sorting, combining, modifying

information

Memory

Page 9: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

The Importance of Memory Not just a store for

information Influences what is

selected How it is interpreted Actively involved in

all aspects of cognition

Page 10: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Limits of the Computer Metaphor

Processes information passively

Nonsense in, nonsense out

Processes information actively

Tries to make sense of information

Nonsense in, sense out

Computer Mind

Page 11: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Computer Information Processing

BANG!Can you wreck a

nice beach?

Page 12: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Human Information Processing

Yes. I can

recognise speech.

Can you wreck a

nice beach?

Page 13: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Schema Driven Processing Knowledge is

organised into schemas

Schemas allow us to make sense of information

Making sense of information can distort it

Page 14: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Schema Driven Processing

‘Pickaxe’

‘Turf cutter’

Input OutputSchema

Bartlett (1932)

Page 15: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Reconstructive MemoriesSchemas are used to reconstruct

memoriesWe attempt to recall things so they

make as much sense as possibleBiases, errors and alterations in

schemas can result in distortions of memory

Page 16: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Reconstructive Errors Loftus conducted

research in which people were deliberately misinformed about what they had seen

She showed that it was possible to alter people’s memories

Page 17: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Key Cognitive Ideas The mind is compared to a computer, with

inputs, processes and outputs Unlike a computer, the mind is both active

and selective in the way it processes information

Schemas are used to interpret experiences and reconstruct memories

Alterations and biases in schemas can affect the accuracy of memory

Page 18: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Alien Abduction

The Truth Is In There

Page 19: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Alien Abduction Experiences

Abduction occurs at night

Abductee is conscious but immobilised

Aliens carry out medical investigation

Elements of sexual molestation

Page 20: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Three Possibilities ‘Abductees’ have

really been kidnapped by aliens.

‘Abductees’ are lying.

‘Abductees’ believe themselves to have been kidnapped by aliens when they actually haven’t.

Page 21: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Occam’s Razor

‘When two competing theories purport to explain the same phenomenon, in the absence of evidence, prefer the simpler one’

Page 22: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

McNally (2003) Tested abductees’

physiological responses to hearing about trauma.

Increased heart rate, sweating etc.

Same responses as combat veterans, car crash survivors victims of violent crime.

Abductees are genuinely traumatised.

Page 23: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Abductee StoriesAbductees have probably not been

kidnapped by aliensThey do not appear to be lying Therefore, it is possible that they have

constructed false memories of alien abduction

Page 24: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Creating False MemoriesRequires a person to believe that

something happened, when it did not.This understanding becomes part of

that person’s schematic understanding.As a result, they may spontaneously

‘recall’ a memory that is actually false.

Page 25: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Loftus & Pickrell (1995) PPs’ relatives

interviewed to help construct a plausible story about getting lost on a shopping trip

PPs interviewed (twice) and asked to recall additional information about the event

Page 26: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Loftus & Pickrell (1995)With repeated discussion, the ‘memory’

was accepted as true by some of the PPs

7 out of 24 accepted the memory and were able to ‘recall’ additional information

Page 27: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Loftus (2001) PPs shown fake advert

of Bugs Bunny at Disneyland

Asked if they remembered meeting ‘Bugs’ on childhood visits to Disneyland

35% reported doing so Impossible, because

Bugs Bunny is a Warner Bros character

Page 28: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Characteristics of Abductees Pre-existing ‘New

Age’ beliefs (astral projection, tarot cards etc.)

Score highly on measures of fantasy/absorption

Episodes of sleep paralysis

McNally (2003)

Page 29: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Sleep ParalysisOccurs on waking from REM sleepBody remains paralysed after waking30% of population experience it at some

time5% of people also experience

hypnopopic hallucinationsThey continue dreaming, despite being

awake

Page 30: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Alien Abduction Memories

Construction of alien abduction

memory

Frightening experience of

sleep paralysis

Prior belief in alien abduction

(schemas)

Input from other believers & ‘abductees’

Attempt to make sense of

experience

McNally (2003)

Page 31: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Alien Abduction MemoriesThe person experiences sleep paralysisThey also experience hypnopopic

hallucinationsThey are motivated to make sense of a

frightening experienceTo do so, they draw on schematic ideas

of alien abductions

Page 32: Contemporary Issues The Cognitive Approach Aidan Sammons

Alien Abduction Memories Contact with other ‘abductees’ reinforces their

belief in the experience and encourages the development of detail in the memory

In some cases, therapists facilitate this process. The resulting memory is real enough to cause

trauma, even though it does not correspond to real events.

Alien abduction experiences are an example of false memory syndrome

Or are they?