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What is Cognitive Psychology? Broad Definition –empirical investigation of mental events and knowledge involved in recognizing an object, remembering a name, having an idea, understanding a sentence, and solving a problem Specific Definition - the empirical investigation of mental processes and activities used in perceiving, remembering, and thinking, and the act of using those processes.

History of Cognitive Psychology

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Page 1: History of Cognitive Psychology

What is Cognitive Psychology?

• Broad Definition –empirical investigation of mental events and knowledge involved in recognizing an object, remembering a name, having an idea, understanding a sentence, and solving a problem

• Specific Definition - the empirical investigation of mental processes and activities used in perceiving, remembering, and thinking, and the act of using those processes.

Page 2: History of Cognitive Psychology

• “Fii atent!” – Concept: Atenția– modul cum filtrăm și selecționăm informațiile

semnificative și importante din mediul înconjurător;

• “Nu știu.”– Concept: Cunoștințe -- stocarea informațiilor generale și a

algoritmilor pentru rezolvarea sarcinilor;

• “Nu-mi amintesc.”– Concept: Memoria– ărocesul de stocare, păstrare și reactualizare

a informațiilor;

• “Nu mă pot decide.”– Concept: Luarea deciziilor – un set de procese complexe ce

conlucrează pentru funcționarea de zi cu zi;

Page 3: History of Cognitive Psychology

Istoria psihologiei cognitive

• Istoria timpurie – origini filosofice– Socrate – interesat de originea cunoașterii;

– Aristotel– interesat în originea cunoașteriiși a memoriei;

• Propune prima teorie a memoriei

– Descartes – cum sunt reprezentate mental cunoștințele

Page 4: History of Cognitive Psychology

Istoria psihologiei cognitive

• Istorie recentă– rădăcinile psihologice– Wilhelm Wundt (1879)

• Primul laborator de psihologie experimentală în Leipzig;

– Fondatorul psihologiei ca știință de sine stătătoare;

– Multi din psihologii din acea vreme au fost școliți în laboratorul lui Wundt

» Peste 200 de psihologi și-au luat doctoratul

• Subiect: cunoașterea umană– Utlizează introspecția pentru a descrie conținuturile

conștientului;

Page 5: History of Cognitive Psychology

Istoria psihologiei cognitive

– Edward Titchner• Studentului lui Wundt, taught at Cornell University

in 1892– Proponent of introspection– Narrow view of psychology

» Excluded mental illness, education apps., and social psych, b/c not open to introspection

» Note: Method defined what was allowable science– Founder of Structuralism

» Study of: Sensations, images, and feelings that were elements of the mind

– Often argued with Wundt over findings

Page 6: History of Cognitive Psychology

History of

– Herman von Ebbinghaus• Contemporary of Wundt in GE

– Big influence on cognitive psych.

– Developed method for studying forgetting as function of time

» Stimuli: lists of Consonant-Vowel-Consonant’s (CVC’s)

» Method: Learn list of CVC’s, count number of trials to recall perfectly Wait 2 days re-learn list.

» Savings score = # of trials to learn the 1st time - # of trials to learn 2nd time

– One subject entire career – himself

– Learned over 40,000 CVC’s

Page 7: History of Cognitive Psychology

History of

– William James• Wundt’s student, hired at Harvard

– Philosopher, but started first American psych. lab

• Proposed Functionalism– Stressed the functions over the mind rather than contents

» How does mind adapt to new circumstances?» Proposed multicomponent memory system: Primary

Memory vs. Secondary memory– Authored: Principles of Psychology, chapters on

Sensation, perception, attention, consciousness, memory, reasoning

Page 8: History of Cognitive Psychology

History of

• Modern History– Human Performance (WWII)

• Attention and perception, – training of solders to use radio and radar

• Signal detection– Blips on radar or sonar

• Information theory – – abstract method for analyzing information processing

Page 9: History of Cognitive Psychology

History of

– Artificial intelligence• How can we make computers behave intelligently?

• Contributed host of concepts– Idea of study machine, allowed us to study our own

processes

– Linguistics• Interested language and language development

• Contributed new mode of analyzing structure of language

Page 10: History of Cognitive Psychology

Emergence of Cognitive Psychology

• 1950’s – 1970’s, no agreed upon date• Ulric Neisser’s “Cognitive Psychology” text

published in 1967• Why did Cog. Psyc emerge?

– Two major factors• Dissatisfaction w/ behaviorism’s account of complex behavior

(e.g., Chompsky’s new model of language)

• Convergence of several other fields during WWII– Linguistics, Human performance, AI

Page 11: History of Cognitive Psychology

Contributors to Cog. Psych

• Human Performance– Abstract way to analyze processing of info.

(development of psychological tools!)– Research ideas in attention and perceptions

• AI– Idea of computer as info. Processor– Computer model – Tool for studying cognition– Focus on complex processing (decision making,

reasoning)

Page 12: History of Cognitive Psychology

Contributors to Cog. Psych

• Linguistics & Verbal learning– Questions about language and its complexity

– Reason to reject behaviorism• Complexities of lang. Not handled by behaviorism

• Philosophy– Age old questions about knowledge and Memory

• Behaviorism– Strong empirical methods and laboratory research

Page 13: History of Cognitive Psychology

Summary• Cog. Psych began with Wundt

– Cognitive issues of mental states– But, introspection method not strong

• Replication difficult, methodology determined acceptable sub-disciplines

• These problems fueled behaviorist movement

• Behaviorism was major paradigm from 1910’s to 1960’s– Focus shifted to overt behavior

• Stimulus response• Mind considered a black box, can’t study what you can’t see,

hear, feel, or touch

– Psychologists need reason to abandon behaviorism• Linguistic’s criticisms provided the stimulus

Page 14: History of Cognitive Psychology

Summary• War time efforts - scientists from different fields

came together for one purpose– Focus on attention and perception– Expansion of methodological toolboxes

• Enabled Psychologist to go beyond S-R psych.

– Idea of humans as “Active” info. Processors• Contrast with behaviorism – Organisms respond to environment

• Invention of computer & focus on mental processes• Chompsky’s review of Skinner’s book on language

– Illuminated inadequacies of behaviorism

Page 15: History of Cognitive Psychology

Cognitive Psychology

• Information processing approach – decomposition of mental processes– Multi-component memory system

• Assumptions of Cog. Psych.– Mental processes exist– People are active information processors– Mental processes and structures can be revealed

by time and accuracy measures

Page 16: History of Cognitive Psychology

EnvironmentalStimuli

SensoryMemory

Short-term / WorkingMemory

Long-term Memory&

KnowledgeCognitive

Psychologyis concerned with

what goes on in here.

Overt ResponseBehavior

Info. Processing model

Page 17: History of Cognitive Psychology

Component of Model

• Sensory memory – input device– What info is sent to the processor

• Short-term / Working memory– Central processor, actively processes info

• Long-term memory / Knowledge– Library of programs, algorithms, data, and

experiences that are stored for use†Note similarities to computer!

Page 18: History of Cognitive Psychology

Sternberg Paradigm

• Test of how info is processed • Subjects (Ss) memorize list of digits

{4, 6, 5, 9, 3, 2}

• Given recognition test9?

Yes/No

• Measure both accuracy and reaction time (Msec.)Some trials were false (8?)

Some were true (9?)

Page 19: History of Cognitive Psychology

Think in terms of Memory system!

96

5

9

3

2

4LTMSTM / WM

--

+-

--

Decision

Page 20: History of Cognitive Psychology

Results

350

400

450

500

550

600

650

0 2 4 6 8

String size

Mse

c

Page 21: History of Cognitive Psychology

Perceive Stimulus

Generate response

Make decision

9=9? 9=3?

9=6? 9=2?

Perceive Stimulus

Generate response

Make decision

7=9? 7=3?7=6? 7=2?

6, 9, 3, 2

9?

7?

What would happen if the search string were 6 items?

What would happen if degraded the probe?

What would happen if we biased the decision process?

Page 22: History of Cognitive Psychology

• Time to respond was linear function of size of search string– Each element added 38 msec to search time

• Serial position did not matter!– Thus, search is exhaustive

• Sternberg’s conclusion: Ss engaged in serial matching process