Language and Thought L4 Flashcards

1
Q

What is representation?

A

Knowledge of the word which forms the content of our thoughts

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2
Q

How do you re-present the world to oneself?

A

(1) Analogical representations: Mental images

(2) Symbolic representations: Propositional thoughts -“internal statements”

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3
Q

What is mental imagery?

A

A representation of a stimulus that originates inside
your brain, rather than from external sensory input i.e. the image that it conjured up in your mind when you think of something you don’t need to have it directly infront of you

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4
Q

What is a Analogical Mental Representation?

A

Picture of a dog represents concept of dog,

but also has many similarities to an actual dog

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5
Q

What is the mental rotation study?

A
  • Participants are shown a stimulus (e.g., ‘R’) that is rotated to different degrees. They must decide whether the letter is normal or a mirror image.
  • The more its rotated the longer the reaction time is as we first have to rotate in our minds until straight.
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6
Q

What are symbols?

A

Represent any kind of content, but don’t resemble what it is they stand for.

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7
Q

What are propositions?

A

Statements that express ideas.

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8
Q

What are propositions made of?

A

Concepts

There is a subject, and what’s
being asserted about that subject (predicate)

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9
Q

What are concepts?

A

An unambiguous internal representation that

defines a group or set of objects or events

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10
Q

What is the relationship between concepts and catergories?

A

Concepts are mental representations of

categories

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11
Q

Why is categorization useful?

A

Allow us to know what to expect each time you encounter a member of the category.

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12
Q

What makes propositions powerful?

A

They express the relationship between concepts (organized like a network) and so this makes them flexible as they can convey complex ideas.

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13
Q

What evidence shows how information in Mental

Representations are Organised?

A

-Semantic priming studies:
Measure how long it takes to access the concept of ‘butter’

Condition 1: bread — butter
Condition 2: ball — butter
Condition 3: xxxx — butter

Condition 1 is fastest as words are related semantically
and so already a little activated

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14
Q

What is reasoning?

A
  • Intelligent thought
  • Making decisions, problem solving
  • Drawing implications from our beliefs
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15
Q

What is deductive reasoning?

A
  • Start with a belief → what are the implications of those beliefs
  • Move from general principles or rules to specific instances
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16
Q

What are logical problems?

A

Validity of conclusion follows from the premises. Use deductive reasoning.

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17
Q

What are Syllogisms?

A
  • A kind of logical argument that applies deductive reasoning to arrive at a conclusion based on two propositions that are asserted or assumed to be true.
  • If/then problems
18
Q

What is an example of a syllogism?

A
  • All animals have 4 legs= premise
  • Fluffy is an animal= premise
  • Fluffy has 4 legs= conclusion

Conclusions follow from the premises – valid

19
Q

What is the logical rule?

A

If something is true for all members of a category and A is a member of that category, then that something will also be true for A

20
Q

What’s important about the initial premises when applying logical reasoning?

A

Initial premises need to be correct

21
Q

What is inductive reasoning? When is it often used?

A
  • Alternative to deductive reasoning
  • Involves testing hypothesis by working up going from the pure data to theories
  • Start with specifics and infer general principles
22
Q

Using the following data what would you infer using inductive reasoning?

Data: You observe the sun rising today, yesterday, the
day before, etc.

A

Conclusion: The sun rises every morning

23
Q

Using inductive reasoning how long do you hold a theory generated?

A

Until you get more information which disproves the theory.

24
Q

What influences our ability to reason

deductively?

A

-Belief Bias
-Confirmation Bias
-The content of what we are reasoning
about matters

25
Q

What is the belief bias?

A

-People often reason on the basis of plausibility rather than logical rules

e.g All humans are capable of evil
Children are human
All children are capable of evil

-People judge whether the conclusion is plausible
on its own, rather than following the logic

26
Q

Given the following cards:
A, 6, J, 7
and the rules:
“If a card has a vowel on one side, it must have an even number on the other side

What cards would you turn over to check the rule?

A

A and 7

27
Q

What is the confirmation bias?

A

-When people seek information that confirms what one
already believes
-People prefer to seek confirmation than to falsify hypotheses
-In other words the beliefs we hold influence how we
process information

28
Q

What is ignoring the bad parts about a relationship an example of?

A

Confirmation bias, seeking only positive information because you want it to be true

29
Q

Where does confirmation bias have an application to the real world?

A

Politics, we seek to find information that already supports our preconceived view of candidates e.g Trump

30
Q

What experiment demonstrates confirmation bias?

A
  • One piece of information obtained under torture one that wasn’t
  • One group oppose to torture one not.
  • Group that supported torture rated both the coerced and noncoerced information as higher importance +necessity than the oppose group.
31
Q

How can confirmation bias be demonstrated in diagnosing an illness? What is an alternative?

A
  • Present with symptoms
  • Doctor formulates a hypothesis that you have disease X
  • Confirming hypothesis → look for other symptoms that are also associated with disease X
  • Disconfirming hypothesis (falsify hypothesis) → look for symptoms that are not associated with disease X
32
Q

How do computer algorithms support the confirmation bias?

A

Algorithms push information to support what you already believe into your social media feeds meaning you exist in a closed off thought bubble.

33
Q

What makes it easier to reason deductively?

A

-The content is important
-If the rules are linked to social contracts, rights
and responsibilities it is easier to think logically (would have had survival advantage)
-Abstract, like numbers = hard

34
Q

What is informal reasoning called?

A
  • Heuristics = shortcuts that are correct much of the time

- Helps conserve cognitive resources

35
Q

What are you doing when making judgments?

A

drawing conclusions from experience

36
Q

What is the concept of availability heuristic?

A
  • Probability (how frequently something happens) estimates are influenced by how easy it is to retrieve information
  • We Formulate a judgement about risk or danger based on how easy it is to remember
  • Highly salient or impactful events more easily retrieved from memory and so judged to be more frequent
    e. g after horror movie far more likely to think someone is breaking in= alters your perception of the likelihood so changes ability to reason.
37
Q

Related to the concept of availability heuristic experiences of who are easier to retrieve?

A

Friends and family

38
Q

What is a saliency bias? (use example)

A

-Trump’s use of violent imagery often associated with
immigrants
-More available then facts and figures

39
Q

Why Use Heuristics?

A
  • They save time
  • They often work
  • They are usually efficient
40
Q

What are the two forms of reasoning?

A
  • Deductive reasoning

- Inductive reasoning