0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views42 pages

Chapter 1

This document provides an overview of early cognitive psychology. It discusses how cognition involves complex mental processes like perception, attention, memory, problem solving and more. It introduces cognitive psychology as the scientific study of the mind and mental processes. The document then summarizes some of the key early contributors to cognitive psychology like Donders who used reaction time experiments, Wundt who established the first psychology lab, and Ebbinghaus who studied memory through nonsense syllables. It discusses how behaviorism became dominant for rejecting the study of inner mental processes, exemplified by Watson and Skinner's work.

Uploaded by

tatafishcatng
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
13 views42 pages

Chapter 1

This document provides an overview of early cognitive psychology. It discusses how cognition involves complex mental processes like perception, attention, memory, problem solving and more. It introduces cognitive psychology as the scientific study of the mind and mental processes. The document then summarizes some of the key early contributors to cognitive psychology like Donders who used reaction time experiments, Wundt who established the first psychology lab, and Ebbinghaus who studied memory through nonsense syllables. It discusses how behaviorism became dominant for rejecting the study of inner mental processes, exemplified by Watson and Skinner's work.

Uploaded by

tatafishcatng
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 42

29/8/2022

COG4013

Chapter 1
Overview on Cognitive Psychology

Ms Valarmatdi
Lecturer

1
29/8/2022

The Complexity of Cognition

• Cognition involves
– Perception
– Paying attention
– Remembering
– Distinguishing items in a category
– Visualizing
– Understanding and production of language
– Problem solving
– Reasoning and decision-making
• All include “hidden” processes of which we may not
be aware

2
29/8/2022

The Complexity of Cognition

• Cognitive Psychology
– The branch of psychology concerned with the
scientific study of the mind (mental
process/functioning)
– Cognition : process in which sensory input is
transformed, reduced, elaborated, stored,
recovered and used
– refers to the mental processes, such as
perception, attention, and memory, that are
what the mind does

3
29/8/2022

Some Questions to Consider

• How is cognitive psychology relevant to everyday


experience?
• Are there practical applications of cognitive
psychology?
• How is it possible to study the inner workings of the
mind when we can’t really see the mind directly?
• How are models used in cognitive psychology?

4
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Donders (1868)
– Measuring how long it takes a person to make
a decision
– Analyze cognitive activity into separate stages
– Earlier, it was assumed that mental operations
involved in responding to a stimulus occurred
instantaneously.
– Reaction-time (RT) experiment
•Measures interval between stimulus
presentation and person’s response to
stimulus

5
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Donders (1868)
– Simple RT task: participant pushes a button
quickly after a light appears
– Choice RT task: participant pushes one button
if light is on right side, another if light is on left
side
– Discrimination RT task: 5 light bulbs and one
response button. When the target light goes on
you must press the button

6
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

7
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

8
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Donders (1868)
– Choice RT – Simple RT = Time to make a
decision
• Choice RT = 1/10th sec longer than Simple RT
• 1/10th sec to make decision
– Mental responses cannot be measured directly
but can be inferred from the participant’s
behavior
– Conclusion: More stages, more time!!

9
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists


• Wundt (1897)
– First psychology laboratory
– University of Leipzig, Germany
– RT experiments

10

10
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Wundt (1897)
– Approach
Structuralism: experience is determined by
combining elements of experience called
sensations (building block or structure of
psychological experience)
– Method
Analytic introspection: participants trained to
describe experiences and thought processes in
response to stimuli

11

11
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists


• William James (1904)
– Approach
Functionalism: Consciousness
– understanding function of the mind, the ways
it helps us adapt.
– Mental states are defined by what they do
rather than by what they are made of.
– How and why we behave the way we do????
– Behaviors' function in a person’s life

12

12
29/8/2022

13

13
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Ebbinghaus (1885/1913)
– Experimental study of memory
– Read list of nonsense syllables aloud many
times to determine number of repetitions
necessary to repeat list without errors
– After some time, he relearned the list
• Short intervals = fewer repetitions to relearn
– The savings curve /forgetting curve

14

14
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• Ebbinghaus
(1885/1913)
– Savings = (Original
time to learn the
list) – (Time to
relearn the list
after a delay)
– Savings curve
shows savings as a
function of
retention interval

15

15
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

16

16
29/8/2022

The First Cognitive Psychologists

• John Watson (behaviorist) noted two problems


with this:
– Extremely variable results from person to
person
– Results difficult to verify
• Invisible inner mental processes

17

17
29/8/2022

The Rise of Behaviorism

• John Watson proposed a new approach called


behaviorism
– Eliminate the mind as a topic of study
(introspective methods)
– Instead, study directly observable behavior
– Behavior is influenced by stimuli, individual’s
history (reinforcement and punishment),
motivational state

18

18
29/8/2022

The Rise of Behaviorism

• Watson and Rayner (1920) – “Little Albert”


experiment
– Classical conditioning of fear
– 9-month-old became frightened by a rat after a
loud noise was paired with every presentation
of the rat

19

19
29/8/2022

The Rise of Behaviorism

• Watson and Rayner (1920) – “Little Albert”


experiment
– Behavior can be analyzed without any
reference to the mind
– Examined how pairing one stimulus with
another affected behavior

20

20
29/8/2022

Classical Conditioning

• Pair a neutral event with an event that


naturally produces some outcome
• After many pairings, the “neutral” event
now also produces the outcome

21

21
29/8/2022

Pavlov’s Discovery: Classical Conditioning

22

22
29/8/2022

The Rise of Behaviorism

• B.F. Skinner (1940s through 1960s)


– Interested in determining the relationship
between stimuli and response
– Operant conditioning
• Shape behavior by rewards or punishments
• Behavior that is rewarded is more likely to
be repeated
• Behavior that is punished is less likely to be
repeated

23

23
29/8/2022

The Rise of Behaviorism

24

24
29/8/2022

The Reemergence of the Mind in Psychology

• Tolman (1938) trained rats to find food in a four-


armed maze
• Two competing interpretations:
– Behaviorism predicts that the rats learned to “turn
right to find food”
– Tolman believed that the rats had created a
cognitive map of the maze and were navigating to
a specific arm

25

25
29/8/2022

The Reemergence of the Mind in Psychology

• Tolman (1938)
• What happens when the rats are placed in a different
arm of the maze?
• The rats navigated to the specific arm where they
previously found food
– Supported Tolman’s interpretation
– Did not support behaviorism interpretation

26

26
29/8/2022

The Reemergence of the Mind in Psychology

27

27
29/8/2022

The Decline of Behaviorism

• A controversy over language acquisition


• Skinner (1957) – Verbal Behavior
– Argued children learn language through
operant conditioning
• Children imitate speech they hear
• Correct speech is rewarded

28

28
29/8/2022

The Decline of Behaviorism

• Chomsky (1959)
– Argued children do not only learn language
through imitation and reinforcement
• Children say things they have never heard and
cannot be imitating
• Children say things that are incorrect and
have not been rewarded for
– Language must be determined by inborn
biological program (The Nativist Theory)

29

29
29/8/2022

Studying the Mind

• To understand complex cognitive behaviors:


– Measure observable behavior
– Make inferences about underlying cognitive
activity
– Consider what this behavior says about how
the mind works

30

30
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

• Shift from behaviorist’s stimulus-response


relationships to an approach that attempts to
explain behavior in terms of the mind
• Information-processing approach
– A way to study the mind created from insights
associated with the digital computer

31

31
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

• Early computers (1950s)


– Processed information in stages
• How much information can the mind
absorb?
• Attend to just some of the incoming
information?

32

32
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

• Cherry (1953)
• “Dichotic” listening
– Present message A in left ear
– Present message B in right ear
– To ensure attention, shadow one message
• Participants were able to focus only on the
message they were shadowing

33

33
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

• Broadbent (1958)
– Flow diagram representing what happens as a
person directs attention to one stimulus
– Unattended information does not pass through
the filter

34

34
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

35

35
29/8/2022

The Cognitive Revolution

36

36
29/8/2022

Artificial Intelligence and Information Theory

• Artificial Intelligence
– “making a machine behave in ways that would
be called intelligent if a human were so
behaving.” (McCarty et al., 1955)
– Newell and Simon created the logic theorist
program that could apply rudimentary logic to
creating mathematical assumptions/hypothesis

37

37
29/8/2022

Modern Research in Cognitive Psychology

• How research progresses from question to


question
– Start with what is known
– Ask questions
– Design experiments
– Obtain and interpret results
– Use results as the bases for new research
questions and experiments

38

38
29/8/2022

The Role of Models in Cognitive Psychology

• There are two kinds of models to be aware of:


1. Structural Models
2. Process Models

39

39
29/8/2022

Structural Models
• Representations
of a physical
structure
• Mimic the form
or appearance
of a given object

40

40
29/8/2022

Process Models
• Represent the processes that are involved in
cognitive mechanisms, with boxes usually
representing specific processes and arrows
indicating connections between processes

41

41
29/8/2022

Process Models

42

42

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy