PSY 322 Exam 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What year was the birth of Psychology

A

1879

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2
Q

What is Cognition?

A

Cognoscere means “to know” in Latin
“The term ‘cognition’ refers to all processes by which the sensory input is transformed, reduced, elaborated, stored, recovered, and used.”

Getting info from the environment then storing it and using it to reason - essentially using information to get stuff done

The mental processes, such as perception, attention, and memory, which is what the mind creates. How the mind operates (it creates representations) and its function (it enables us to act and to achieve goals). It is no coincidence that all of the cognitions in the first definition play important roles in acting to achieve goals.

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3
Q

Cognition Involves:
All Include —

A

Perception
Paying attention
Remembering and Memory
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 - unconscious streams of processing that we might not be aware
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4
Q

Cognitive Psychology:

A

The branch of psychology concerned with the scientific study of the mind

Cognition refers to the mental processes, such as perception, attention, and memory, that are what the mind creates

The science of thought - taking in information, storing it and then processing it in anyway

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5
Q

The Timeline - 11 total

A

1868 - Donders Reaction Time
1879 - Wundt Scientific Lab
1885 - Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
1890 - James Principles of Psyc
1913 - Watson Behaviorism
1938/1957 - Skinner Operant Conditioning, Verbal Behavior
1948 - Tolman Cog Map
1959 - Chomsky Review of Skinner Verbal
1953 - Cherry Attention
1958 - Broadbent Flow Diagram
1968 - Atkinson and Shiffrin model of memory

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6
Q

The mind:

A

Is involved in forming and recalling memories

Solves problems, considers possibilities, makes decisions

Helps us to survive and function normally

Is a symbol of creativity and intelligence

Creates representations of the world so we can act in it

The mind is a system that creates representations of the world so that we can act within it to achieve our goals.

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7
Q

Donders (1868) measured

RT
Simple vs Choice

The subtractive method

A

Donders (1868) measured how long it takes a person to make a decision. Donders was interested in determining how long it takes for a person to make a decision. He determined this by measuring reaction time—how long it takes to respond to presentation of a stimulus. Donders said that different decisions take different amounts of time like something internal that you can’t externally observe and this is the issue of cog trying to get in the head of what we can’t obsereve. The purpose of Donders’s experiment was to determine how much time it took to decide which key to press in the choice reaction time task.

Reaction Time (RT): Measures interval between stimulus presentation and person’s response to stimulus. Reaction time is measuring the difference of time and the presentation of stimulus and a person’s response to it. Like a stop watch I know what time I stopped the watch and what time you reacted to it and when I showed stimulus and when you responded to it.

Simple RT task: participant pushes a button quickly after a light appears – I show light and once you see light you hit the button that’s the response

Choice RT task: participant pushes one button if light is on right side, another if light is on left side – Identical to simple expect you with see light on left side or right and then responded if it’s on the right or the left

The subtractive method: Choice RT − Simple RT = time to make a decision — Simple took one sec and Choice took 1.2 sec and in both you have to see a light press button and make a reaction/choice. What’s leftover is the decision so it took 0.2 sec extra for the choice experiment.

Mental responses cannot be measured directly but can be inferred from the participant’s behavior

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8
Q

Wundt (1879) established first

Structuralism:

Analytic Introspection:

A

Wundt (1879) established first scientific psychology lab

Structuralism: overall experience is determined by combining basic elements of experience called sensations - broke down the components of consciousness.

Method of analytic introspection: participants trained to describe experiences and thought processes in response to stimuli

Breaking consciousness up into its different parts using analytic method which was showing someone a picture and then breaking up how a person responded or felt with the picture but it did not show the building blocks of consciousness. Major issue is that there were no concrete results and participants were influenced by the person conducting it. According to structuralism, our overall experience is determined by combining basic elements of experience the structuralists called sensations. Wundt thought he could achieve this scientific description of the components of experience by using analytic introspection, a technique in which trained participants described their experiences and thought processes in response to stimuli

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9
Q

Ebbinghaus (1885): known for what

Short-break intervals

Savings

The forgetting curve

Savings curve

A

Memory and Forgetting - taught us how fast we can forget and retain

Read list of nonsense syllables aloud to determine number of repetitions necessary to repeat list without errors —- After taking a break, he relearned the list

Short-break intervals = fewer repetitions necessary to relearn list

Savings = (Original time to learn list) − (Time to relearn list after delay)
- Learn something the first time and then wait and see how long it takes you to learn it again and it was always shorter re-learning it meaning you have a savings

The forgetting curve that over time you forget more stuff
He taught us how fast we can forget stuff

Savings curve shows savings as a function of retention interval — Shows that memory drops rapidly for the first 2 days after the initial learning and then levels off. This curve was important because it demonstrated that memory could be quantified and that functions like the savings curve could be used to describe a property of the mind—in this case, the ability to retain information.

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10
Q

William James (1890):

functionalist

A

Principles of Psychology:

Observations based on the functions of his own mind, not experiments

Considered many topics in cognition, including thinking, consciousness, attention, memory, perception, imagination, and reasoning.

James laid the foundation for psych in the US, he was a functionalist and not a structuralist which broke down the components of consciousness. He, as a functionalist, thought the function of what we do was much more interesting and he wrote principles of psychology which were mostly accurate for his time.

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11
Q

Watson (1913):

Two problems with analytic introspection method:

Behaviorism:

“Little Albert” Experiment:

Classical Conditioning:

A

Two problems with analytic introspection method:
- Extremely variable results per person
- Results difficult to verify due to focus on invisible inner mental processes

Behaviorism:
- Eliminate the mind as a topic of study and study directly observable behavior - easy data
- Mind: all inner stuff that can’t be measured and can’t be seen by the unconscious mind

“Little Albert” Experiment:
- 9-month-old Albert became frightened by a rat after a loud noise was paired with every presentation of the rat
- Examined how pairing one stimulus with another affected behavior
- Demonstrated that behavior can be analyzed without any reference to the mind

Classical Conditioning:
- how pairing one stimulus (such as the loud noise presented to Albert) with another, previously neutral stimulus (such as the rat) causes changes in the response to the neutral stimulus.
- Pair a neutral event with an event that naturally produces some outcome
- After many pairings, the “neutral” event now also produces the outcome

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12
Q

Skinner (1938 AND 1957):

Operant Conditioning:

Verbal Behavior:

A

B. F. Skinner interested in determining the relationship between stimuli and response

Operant conditioning:
- Shape behavior by rewards or punishments
- Rewarded behavior more likely to be repeated
- Punished behavior that less likely to be repeated

Verbal Behavior:
- Argued children learn language through operant conditioning
- Children imitate speech they hear
- Correct speech is rewarded

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13
Q

Tolman (1948)

His Experiment

Cognitive map:

A

Cog Map - The Reemergence of the Mind in Psychology

Trained rats to find food in a four-armed maze
- When a rat was placed in a different arm of the maze, it went to the specific arm where it previously found food
- Tolman believed the rat had created a cognitive map, a representation of the maze in its mind
- The map helped the rat navigate to a specific arm despite starting the maze from a different spot
- Rejected the behaviorist perspective for the rat’s actions because you taught it go right find food but it didn’t do that.

Cognitive map—a conception within the rat’s mind of the maze’s layout

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14
Q

Chomsky (1959): Review of who?

Language must be determined by

Issues with behaviorism

A

Chomsky Review of Skinner Verbal Behavior

Argued that 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

Issues with behaviorism one is language and how does it work and learn new languages.

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15
Q

Cherry (1953)
Broadbent (1958)

Information is first received and the steps

A

Cherry Attention
Broadbent Flow Diagram

Cherry built on James’s idea of attention
- Present message A in left ear and message B in right ear
- Subjects could understand details of message A despite also hearing message B

Broadbent developed flow diagram to show what occurs as a person directs attention to one stimulus - Unattended information does not pass through the filter

Information is first received by an “input processor.” It is then stored in a “memory unit” before it is processed by an “arithmetic unit,” which then creates the computer’s output.

Input - filter - detector - memory

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16
Q

The Decline of Behaviorism:

What year and what now focus on?

Kuhn defined

Controversy with behaviorism

Information-processing approach

A

1950s recognized as the beginning of the cognitive revolution—a shift in psychology from the behaviorist’s focus on stimulus to understand the operation of the mind.

Shift from behaviorist’s stimulus–response relationships to an approach that attempts to explain behavior in terms of the mind

Kuhn defined a scientific revolution as a shift from one paradigm to another, where a paradigm is a system of ideas that dominate science at a particular time. A scientific revolution, therefore, involves a paradigm shift. Now the digital age.

A controversy over language acquisition

Information-processing approach:
Way to study the mind based on insights associated with the digital computer
States that operation of the mind occurs in stages

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17
Q

Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968)

Three-stage model of memory:
sensory
short
long

Tulving Long-term memory into three components:
Episodic
Semantic
Procedural

A

Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968) developed a three-stage model of memory:
- sensory memory (less 1 sec)
- short term memory (a few seconds, limited capacity)
- long-term memory (long duration, high capacity)

Information we remember is brought from long-term memory into short term memory

Long-term memory into three components:
Episodic ▪ Life events
Semantic ▪ Facts
Procedural ▪ Physical actions (driving)

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18
Q

Neuropsychology:

Electrophysiology:

Brain imaging:
PET
fMRI

A

Neuropsychology studies behavior of people with brain damage, and has been providing insights into the functioning of different parts of the brain since the 1800s.
Regardless of cause of damage

Electrophysiology studies electrical responses of the nervous system including brain neurons. Measuring electrical responses of the nervous system, made it possible to listen to the activity of single neurons. Measuring brain waves and see different sleep cycles and ability to do brain imaging

PET: Positron emission tomography - made it possible to see which areas of the human brain are activated during cognitive activity

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)

Both technologies show which brain areas are active during specific episodes of cognition

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19
Q

Levels of Analysis:

A

Levels of Analysis:
- We do not examine topics of interest from a single perspective; we look at them from multiple angles and different points of view
- Each “viewpoint” can add small amounts of information that, when considered together, lead to greater understanding
- Different levels to focus on like memory storage or neurons communicating

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20
Q

Building Blocks of the Nervous System:
Neurons:
Cell body/soma:
Dendrites:
Axon:

A

Neurons: cells specialized to create, receive, and transmit information in the nervous system
Each neuron has a cell body, an axon, and dendrites

Cell body/soma: contains mechanisms to keep cell alive

Dendrites: multiple branches reaching from the cell body, which receive information from other neurons

Axon: tube filled with fluid that transmits electrical signal to other neurons

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21
Q

How Neurons Communicate:

AP

Measuring action potentials

Synapse

NT

How Neurons Process Information

A

Action potential: Neuron receives signal from environment then Information travels down the axon of that neuron to the dendrites of another neuron

Measuring AP:
- Microelectrodes pick up electrical signal, Placed near axon, Active for 1 second
- Size is not measured; it remains consistent
- The rate of firing is measured
Low-intensity stimulus: slow firing OR High-intensity stimulus: fast firing

Synapse: space between axon of one neuron and dendrite or cell body of another
When the action potential reaches the end of the axon, synaptic vesicles open and release chemical neurotransmitters

Neurotransmitters, chemicals that affect the electrical signal of the receiving neuron, cross the synapse and bind with the receiving dendrites
Neurotransmitters: chemicals that affect the electrical signal of the receiving neuron
- Excitatory: increases chance neuron will fire
- Inhibitory: decreases chance neuron will fire

How Neurons Process Information:
- Not all signals received lead to action potential
- The cell membrane processes the number of impulses received
- An action potential results only if the threshold level is reached - Interaction of excitation and inhibition

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22
Q

Definition of the mind:

Principle of neural representation:

A

Definition of the mind: A system that creates representations of the world, so we can act on it to achieve goals

Principle of neural representation: Everything a person experiences is based on representations in the person’s nervous system.

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23
Q

Feature Detectors - Hubel & Wiesel (1960s)

Experience-dependent plasticity:

A

Feature detectors: neurons that respond best to a specific stimulus

Experience-dependent plasticity:
the structure of the brain changes with experience

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24
Q

Hierarchical Processing:

A

When we perceive different objects, we do so in a specific order that moves from lower to higher areas of the brain

The ascension from lower to higher areas of the brain corresponds to perceiving objects that range from lower (simple) to higher levels of complexity

Can lose the ability to decipher certain sounds if it’s not used. Like using a muscle then it grows, not using it can deteriorate.

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25
Q

**Sensory Coding:
**

Specificity coding

Population coding

Sparse coding

A

Specificity coding: Representation of a stimulus by the firing of specifically tuned neurons specialized to respond only to a specific stimulus

Population coding: Representation of a stimulus by the pattern of firing of a large number of neurons

Sparse coding: Representation of a stimulus by a pattern of firing of only a small group of neurons, with the majority of neurons remaining silent

Specificity coding: IS WRONG WE DO NOT DO THIS - cells in the body sometimes die and like neuron four doesnt work that doesn’t mean that you won’t perceive the stimulus

Population or Sparse: Could be either it is distributing and pattern like

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26
Q

Localization of Function:

Specific functions are served by specific areas of the brain

Cognitive functioning declines in specific ways when certain areas of the brain are damaged

A

Cerebral cortex (3-mm-thick layer covering the brain) contains mechanisms responsible for most cognitive functions - outermost layer

Frontal Lobe: primary motor cortex, reasoning, planning, speech, emotions, problem solving, decision making

Parietal Lobe: primary somatosensory cortex(touch mostly), orientation, recognition, attention

Occipital Lobe: visual processing

Temporal Lobe: hearing, smell, memory, and speech

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27
Q

Localization of Function: Language

A

Language production is impaired by damage to Broca’s area – Frontal lobe - Production

Language comprehension is impaired by damage to Wernicke’s area – Temporal lobe - comprehension

Production vs comprehension

Patients with this problem—slow, labored, ungrammatical speech caused by damage to Broca’s area—are diagnosed as having Broca’s apha-sia. The fact that damage to a specific area of the brain caused a specific deficit of behavior was striking evidence against the idea of equipotentiality and for the idea of localization of function. Eighteen years after Broca reported on his frontal lobe patients, Carl Wernicke (1879) described a number of patients who had damage to an area in their temporal lobe that came to be called Wernicke’s area. Wernicke’s patients produced speech that was fluent and grammatically correct but tended to be incoherent. Here is a modern example of the speech of a patient with Wernicke’s aphasia

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28
Q

Localization of Function: Perception
Primary receiving areas for the senses
Brain areas

A

Occipital lobe: vision

Parietal lobe: touch, temperature, and pain

Temporal lobe: hearing, taste, and smell

Coordination of information received from all senses – Frontal lobe

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29
Q

Localization Demonstrated by Brain Imaging:
fMRI
FFA
PPA
EBA

A

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) - Measures neural activity by identifying highly oxygenated hemoglobin molecules – Activity recorded in voxels

Fusiform face area (FFA) responds specifically to faces
Damage to this area causes prosopagnosia (inability to recognize faces)
Area in brain that specifically responds to faces

Parahippocampal place area (PPA) responds specifically to places (indoor/outdoor scenes)

Extrastriate body area (EBA) responds specifically to pictures of bodies and parts of bodies

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30
Q

Central principle of cognition:

A

Central principle of cognition: Most of our experience is multidimensional. - experience world in a more rich a complicated way

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31
Q

Connectome:

A

Connectome: structural description of the network of elements and connections forming the human brain
- Interconnected areas of the brain that communicate with each other
- Parts of brain does not function in isolation but work together and facilitate communication
- Connectome is like the human genome mapping all genes that exist but not knowing what they all do or all their interactions, the connectome is like that but the setup of your nervous system with elements of structures and also how it works

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32
Q

Structural connectivity:

Functional connectivity:

A

Structural connectivity:
the brain’s “wiring diagram” created by axons that connect brain areas
- as unique to individuals as fingerprints
- Will change over time due to things like plasticity

Functional connectivity:
how groups of neurons within the connectome function in relation to types of cognition
- determined by the amount of correlated neural activity in two brain areas

Like roads that exist in city and traffic that follows, structure is the road of what connects to what whereas functional is how they function and pass information

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33
Q

Six Common Functions Determined by Resting-State fMRI: Different types of networks seeing it by fMRI by having them do nothing or certain types of tasks.

Visual:
Somato-motor:
Dorsal Attention:
Executive Control:
Salience:
Default mode:

A

Visual: Vision; visual perception

Somato-motor: Movement and touch

Dorsal Attention: Attention to visual stimuli and spatial locations

Executive Control: Higher-level cognitive tasks involved in working memory and directing attention during tasks

Salience(standout): Attending to survival-relevant events in the environment

Default mode: Mind wandering, and cognitive activity related to personal life-story, social functions, and monitoring internal emotional states

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34
Q

Dynamics of cognition:

A

the flow and activity within and across the brain’s functional networks change based on conditions

change within and across networks is constant

The only thing constant is change bc demands and life changes us

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35
Q

Default mode network:

A

mode of brain function that occurs when it is at rest

one of the brain’s largest networks

What happens when at rest just chilling not doing anything active

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36
Q

Sensation:

A

absorbing raw energy (e.g., light waves, sound waves) through our sensory organs - start point of getting energy from the environment like light in eyes or air pressure or pain or temp that we absorb

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37
Q

Transduction:

A

conversion of this energy to neural signals - truing the energy into neural signals - like photoreceptor reaching fovea in the cones and then reaching the primary visual cortex

38
Q

Attention:

A

concentration of mental energy to process incoming information

39
Q

Perception:

A

selecting, organizing, and interpreting these signals - end point and is a subject experience based on the sensation that has been interpreted by the brain

40
Q

Overview: Sensation and Perception

A

Energy contains information about the world (usually incomplete, full of noise, and distorted)

Accessory structure modifies energy

Receptor transduces energy into a neural response

Sensory nerve transmits the coded activity to the central nervous system

Thalamus processes and relays the neural response

Related to specialized areas of the cortex

Perception of the world is created

41
Q

Perception Is:

A

Experience resulting from stimulation of the senses

  • Perceptions can change based on added information - something far away can’t really identify so you use context clues to guess what it is and then as you get closer you see what it really is so your perfection evolves
  • Involves a process similar to reasoning or problem solving
  • Perceptions occur in conjunction with actions
42
Q

The human perceptual system uses two types of information:

A
  • Environmental energy stimulating the receptors
  • Knowledge and expectations the observer brings to the situation
43
Q

Direct perception theories
Bottom up processing

A

Perception comes from stimuli in the environment
Parts are identified and put together, and then recognition occurs

  • Has to do with bringing in info from the outside, so light hitting retina, sound hitting hear, from outside world hitting your brain. The building blocks of perception.
  • Perception may start with the senses
  • Incoming raw data
  • Energy registering on receptors
44
Q

Constructive perception theories
Top-down processing

A

People actively construct perceptions using information based on expectations

  • The influence of what’s already in your head so prior knowledge, experience, and expectations. We actively construct our perception because of what we already know from passed knowledge and what primarily drives the outside world info
  • Perception(the experience that is internal to us or subject tied to simulation of our senses) may start with the brain
  • Person’s knowledge, experience, and expectations
45
Q

Hearing Words in a Sentence: (auditory example)
Top-down processing

Speech segmentation:

Transitional probabilities:

A

influences our perception of language based on our individual experience with the language

Speech segmentation: The ability to tell when one word ends and another begins

Transitional probabilities:
Knowing which sound will likely follow another in a word - top down having a lot of experience with a language

Some perceptions are the results of unconscious assumptions we make about the environment
We use our knowledge to inform our perceptions
We infer much of what we know about the world - based on guess we have never verified

46
Q

Helmholtz’s Unconscious Inference: also called idea of likelihood principle

A

We perceive the world in the way that is “most likely” based on our past experiences
topdown

47
Q

Perceptual Organization:
Old VS New View

A

“Old” view - structuralism
Perception involves adding up sensations - bottom

“New” view - Gestalt principles
The mind groups patterns according to intrinsic laws of perceptual organization

According to structuralism, a number of sensations (represented by the dots) add up to create our perception of the face.

New said doesn’t fit in top or down category - they said “the whole is greater than some of its parts” - highlight how we organize incoming info in a way that makes it make sense so how to catalog what we are seeing. Individual building blocks coming together.

48
Q

Gestalt Principles of Perceptual Organization:
New View

Principle of good continuation:

Law of pragnanz (Principle of simplicity or good figure):

Principle of similarity:

Principle of familiarity:

A

The illusion of movement created by the stroboscope, which is called apparent movement because, although movement is perceived, nothing is actually moving. There are three components to stimuli that create apparent movement: (1) One light flashes on and off; (2) there is a period of darkness, lasting a fraction of a second; and (3) the second light flashes on and off

Principle of good continuation:
Lines tend to be seen as following the smoothest path

Law of pragnanz (Principle of simplicity or good figure): Every stimulus pattern is seen so the resulting structure is as simple as possible
- Example olympic symbol is perceived as five circles, not as nine shapes. You would never perceive it as nine at first you would see the five first. Like to have simple structures.

Principle of similarity:
Similar things appear grouped together

Principle of familiarity:
Things are more likely to form groups if the groups appear familiar or meaningful
- Face tree

Perception is determined by specific organizing principles, not just dark and light stimuli activating the retina - little more than just basic bottom up

Role of experience is minor compared to these intrinsic, “built in” principles

Experience can influence perception but is not the key driver

49
Q

Regularities of the Environment: Physical

Oblique effect:

Light-from-above assumption:

A

Common physical properties of the environment

Oblique effect: We perceive verticals and horizontals more easily than other orientations - experience dependent plasticity or in our everyday lives and in environment

Light-from-above assumption:
We assume light comes from above because this is common in our environment
We perceive shadows as specific information about depth and distance

Helps drive perception by experience with the environment, the light source is usually above and the sun is above. Shadows tell us info

50
Q

Regularities of the Environment: Semantic

A

The meaning of a given scene is related to what happens within that scene.
Semantic regularities are the characteristics associated with functions carried out in different types of scenes.

Scene schema:
It is knowledge of what a given scene ordinarily contains.
In the jewelry case at Tiffany’s, would you expect to see a plate of fish and chips or diamond rings?

51
Q

Comparing Conceptions of Object Perception:

A

Top-down processing
- Unconscious inference
- Environmental regularities

Bottom-up processing
- Gestalt principles

52
Q

Neurons, Knowledge, and the Environment: Famous greeble study by Gautheir

A

wanted to see do we change the FFA how we process stimuli by getting a lot of experience of processing non human faces, believing FFA was only for human faces. Had people look at computer generated green little stuff called greeble that each differed a little like people do so some with hat some with long nose. Had the participants taken a baseline response for human faces and seen overall how human faces vs green activated the FFA. Then put people through Greeble training so basically looking at the green stuff and by features put into categories and then test again after training and what happens with FFA. They found that after greeble training that before low and after high due to greebale training so really recognized it with FFA, with faces after training human faces actually decreased because they haven’t looked at human faces for a while telling us that it is experience-dependent plasticity. FFA will respond and modify to your environment, that demands changes to what it does.

53
Q

By comparing reaction times across different tasks, Donders was able to conclude how long the mind needs to perform a certain cognitive task. Donders interpreted the difference in reaction time between the simple and choice conditions of his experiment as indicating how long it took to

a.perceive the stimulus.
b.process the stimulus.
c.attend to the stimulus.
d.make a decision about the stimulus.

A

d.make a decision about the stimulus.

54
Q

Which of the following stimuli were used in Ebbinghaus’ “memory” experiment discussed in your text?
a.Common words
b.Light illuminated on the left or the right of a computer screen
c.Grey rectangles in front of light rectangles
d.Three-letter nonsense words

A

d.Three-letter nonsense words

55
Q

Regarding children’s language development, Noam Chomsky noted that children generate many sentences they have never heard before. From this, he concluded that language development is driven largely by
a.inborn programming.
b.cultural influences.
c.classical conditioning.
d.operant conditioning.

A

a.inborn programming.

56
Q

John Watson believed that psychology should focus on the study of
a.observable behavior.
b.mental processes.
c.consciousness.
d.attention.

A

a.observable behavior.

57
Q

Action potentials travel along the
a.cell body.
b.synapse.
c.neurotransmitters.
d.axon.

A

d.axon.

58
Q

The occipital lobe is
a.the first place in the cerebral cortex where visual information is received.
b.important for language, memory, hearing, and vision.
c.important for higher functions such as language, thought, and memory, as well as motor functioning.
d.where signals are received from the sensory system for touch.

A

a.the first place in the cerebral cortex where visual information is received.

59
Q

Brain imaging has made it possible to
a.determine which areas of the brain are involved in different cognitive processes.
b.view individual neurons in the brain.
c.show how environmental energy is transformed into neural energy.
d.view propagation of action potentials.

A

a.determine which areas of the brain are involved in different cognitive processes.

60
Q

Josiah is trying to speak to his wife, but his speech is very slow and labored. Josiah may have damage to his
a.Broca’s area.
b.Parahippocampal place area (PPA)
c.Extrastriate body area (EBA)
d.Wernicke’s area.

A

a.Broca’s area.

61
Q

“Perceiving machines” are used by the U.S. Postal service to “read” the addresses on letters and sort them quickly to their correct destinations. Sometimes, these machines cannot read an address, because the writing on the envelope is not sufficiently clear for the machine to match the writing to an example it has stored in memory. Human postal workers are much more successful at reading unclear addresses, most likely because of
a. bottom-up processing.
b. top-down processing.
c. their in-depth understanding of principles of perception.
d. repeated practice at the task.

A

b. top-down processing.

62
Q

Charlene sees her boyfriend across campus and waves. Even though the image he projects on her retina from that distance is quite small, Charlene does not perceive him to have shrunk at all. Instead, she perceives him as far away because of
a.the light-from-above heuristic.
b.algorithmic thinking.
c. experience-dependent plasticity.
d.size constancy.

A

d.size constancy.

63
Q

The theory of unconscious inference includes the
a.oblique effect.
b.likelihood principle.
c.principle of componential recovery.
d.principle of speech segmentation.

A

b.likelihood principle.

64
Q

“Every stimulus pattern is seen in such a way that the resulting structure is as simple as possible” refers to which Gestalt law?
a.Good figure
b.Similarity
c.Familiarity
d.Common fate

A

a.Good figure

65
Q

When Sam listens to his girlfriend Susan in the restaurant and ignores other people’s conversations, he is engaged in the process of ____ attention.
a.low load
b.divided
c.cocktail party
d.selective

A

d.selective

66
Q

In a dichotic listening experiment, ______ refers to the procedure that is used to force participants to pay attention to a specific message among competing messages.
a.rehearsing
b.shadowing
c.echoing
d.delayed repeating

A

b.shadowing

67
Q

In Broadbent’s filter model, the stages of information processing occur in which order?
a.Detector, filter, sensory store, memory
b.Sensory store, filter, detector, memory
c.Filter, detector, sensory store, memory
d.Detector, sensory store, filter, memory

A

b.Sensory store, filter, detector, memory

68
Q

Automatic processing occurs when
a.cognitive resources are high.
b.response times are long.
c.tasks are well-practiced.
d.attention is focused.

A

c.tasks are well-practiced.

69
Q

What pathway:

A

perception
Determining the identity of an object
Ventral pathway (lower part of the brain)

70
Q

Where pathway:

A

action
Determining the location of an object
Dorsal pathway (upper part of the brain)

71
Q

Perception and Action: Using Dissociation Logic:

Single dissociation

Double dissociation

A

If you are trying to understand a complex system, you can logically deduce conclusions from “malfunctions”
Damage to different areas of the brain cause very different deficits
We can conclude that a specific area is necessary for a specific function

Single dissociation
- One function is lost, another remains
- Example: Monkey A has damage to the temporal lobe. This monkey is no longer able to identify objects (what) but can still identify locations (where)
- Therefore, what and where rely on different mechanisms, although they may not operate totally independent of one another

Double dissociation
- Requires two individuals with different damage and opposite deficits
- Example: Monkey A with temporal lobe damage has intact where but impaired what; Monkey B with parietal lobe damage has intact what but impaired where
- Therefore, what and where streams must have different mechanisms AND operate independently of one another

72
Q

Mirror Neurons:

A

These neurons respond while a subject watches an action being performed in the same way as if the subject was performing the action.

fMRI research has found evidence of a mirror neuron system in the brain.

Iacoboni (2005) found a higher rate of mirroring if the subject’s intention to perform the action was greater.

73
Q

Attention:

Selective
Divided
Limited
Overt
Covert

A

Attention: The ability to focus on specific stimuli or locations in our environment

Selective: attending to one thing while ignoring others

Divided: paying attention to more than one thing at a time

Limited: in capacity and timing

Both overt(what I’m looking at consciously) and covert: we can consciously attend to information but some information grabs our attention

74
Q

Research Method: Dichotic Listening

A

One message is presented to the left ear and another to the right ear.
Participant “shadows”(repeating echoing back to make sure they were listening) one message to ensure he is attending to that message.
Can we completely filter out the message to the unattended ear and attend only to the shadowed message?
How to study selective attention early on was dichotic listening – put headset on someone one ear is one message other ear a different message and then asking people to focus on one message and filter out the other message and attended only to the shadow message - this is what Cherry did

Participants could not report the content of the message in unattended ear:
Knew that there was a message
Knew the gender of the speaker

75
Q

However, unattended ear is being processed at some level:

A

Cocktail party effect: a gathering of some sort and at a noisy gathering having convo with one person and you can within reason focus on the one pearson and tune out the other noises but you can hear slight mermeres, and then you can hear something pop out like your own name, certain things grab your attention. Can select for one stream of info but certain things can come in a grab your attention.
Change in gender is noticed
Change to a tone is noticed

76
Q

Models of Selective Attention:

Where does the attention filter occur?

Early selection model

Intermediate selection model

Late selection model

A

Where does the attention filter occur?
Early in processing
Later in processing

Early selection model
Broadbent’s filter model

Intermediate selection model
Treisman’s attenuation model

Late selection model
For example, MacKay (1973)

Early on thought of attention is a filter → if attention is a filter where does it occur early or later in processing. Filter happens when you process meaning so where does filter happen.

77
Q

Broadbent’s Filter Model:

Sensory memory

Filter

Detector

Short Term

Issues

A

Sensory store, filter, detector, memory

Early selection model
Filters message before incoming information is analyzed for meaning
Message → Sensory/Memory → Attend Message (Attention) → Detector → To memory

Filtering(when you are blocking out stimuli you don’t want) occurs early in the stream before you have processed meaning. Messages you get several like at a cocktail party and get passed to filter and it says I only pay attention to a certain stream, only attended messages gets through, his model is like a brick wall saying only attended gets through and then to memory. But this is wrong.

Sensory memory - temporary storage place as a buffer
Holds all incoming information for a fraction of a second
Transfers all information to next stage

Filter
Identifies attended message based on physical characteristics (what’s entering left or what sounds coming from pearson you are trying to talk to)
Only attended message is passed onto the next stage —» Key to the model
Detector - takes info and makes sense of it (what were words being said and then processes)
Processes all information to determine higher-level characteristics of the message
Short-term memory
Receives output of detector
Holds information for 10–15 seconds and may transfer it to long-term memory

Broadbent’s Model Could Not Explain: ISSUES
Why participant’s name gets through
Cocktail party phenomenon
Why participants can shadow meaningful messages that switch from one ear to another
Dear Aunt Jane (Gray & Wedderburn, 1960)
Message you shadow - follow content of message not what’s coming in from each ear like not just ignoring one ear

78
Q

Treisman’s Attenuation Model: - accessing of meaning a little later

Attenuator

Dictionary unit

A

Intermediate selection model
Attended messages can be separated from unattended messages early in the information-processing system.
Selection can also occur later.

Message → Attenuator → Dictionary Unit → To memory

Instead of brick wall she said Attenuator which means to lesson impact which means we let in the attended message in full strength but the unattended gets through just in a weaker sense

Attenuator
It analyzes incoming messages in terms of physical characteristics, language, and meaning.
Attended message is let through the attenuator at full strength.
Unattended messages are let through at much weaker strength.
Broadbent only physical she said language and meaning

Dictionary unit
Contains words, each of which has a threshold for being activated
Words that are common or important have low thresholds - easier to get through like your name
Uncommon words have high thresholds - harder to get through like a random word like rutabaga

79
Q

Late Selection Models: meaning gets processed late and then selected

A

Selection of stimuli for final processing does not occur until after information has been analyzed for meaning. - selection comes into play when you decided what your listening to
MacKay (1973)

Meaning of the biasing word affected participants’ choice.
Participants were unaware of the presentation of the biasing words.
So what they heard in the unattended ear - meaning affected choice without conscious choice. She said evidence that we select very late and process everything just not at a conscious level and consciously when you respond to it is when you choose.

80
Q

Load Theory of Attention:

A

Processing capacity—how much information a person can handle at any given moment
Perceptual load—the difficulty of a given task

High-load (difficult) tasks use higher amounts of processing capacity

Low-load (easy) tasks use lower amounts of processing capacity

81
Q

Overt Attention:

A

Eye movements, attention, and perception

Saccades: rapid movements of the eyes from one place to another - reading jumping from point a to point b

Fixations: short pauses on points of interest - when people stop and pauses to take in points of info

Studied by using an eye tracker
Where are you looking and studying it by eye tracking.

82
Q

Overt Bottom-up Determinants of Eye Movement:

A

Stimulus salience: areas that stand out and capture attention - grabs your attention
Bottom-up process
Depends on characteristics of the stimulus
Color and motion are highly salient

What determines what we look at it - bottom up based on what catches your attention that pop up things like color or motion - what is distinctive

83
Q

Overt Top-Down Determinants of Eye Movements:

A

Scene schema: knowledge about what is contained in typical scenes
Help guide fixations from one area of a scene to another

Eyes movements are determined by task
Eyes movements preceded motor actions by a fraction of a second

What determines what we look at top - like knowledge of what is contained in scene guides. Task also dedicates what you look at to it so look and get perceptual information.

84
Q

Covert Attention: Attention Without Eye Movements:
Precueing

A

Covert Attention: Attention Without Eye Movements: what are we processing when were not actually looking at something

Precueing: directing attention without moving the eyes
Participants respond faster to a light at an expected location than at an unexpected location
Even when eyes kept fixed

85
Q

The Stroop Test:

A

The Stroop Test: dividing attention and automatic attention

Stroop effect
Name of the word interferes with the ability to name the ink color
Cannot avoid paying attention to the meanings of the words
Name the color of the ink used to print these shapes or Name the color of the ink used to print these words

86
Q

Dividing Attention: possible to divide attention and practice makes perfect

A

Practice enables people to simultaneously do two things that were difficult at first. - driving hard at first only focus on driving - 20 years later really good at driving and you can now talk or listen to music

Schneider and Shiffrin (1977)
Divide attention between remembering target and monitoring rapidly presented stimuli
Memory set: one to four characters called target stimuli
Test frames: could contain random dot patterns, a target, distractors

Automatic processing occurs without intention and only uses some of a person’s cognitive resources.

87
Q

Difficulties creating a perceiving machine
Inverse projection problem and viewpoint invariance

A

The perceptual system is not concerned with determining an object’s image on the retina. It starts with the image on the retina, and its job is to determine what object “out there” created the image. The task of determining the object responsible for a particular image on the retina is called the inverse projection problem, because it involves starting with the retinal image and extending rays out from the eye.

Objects are often viewed from different an-gles, so their images are continually changing, as in Figure 3.10. People’s ability to recognize an object even when it is seen from different viewpoints is called viewpoint invariance.

88
Q

Feature integration theory

A

Separating objects such as seeing a ball and seeing its shape and color separately.
We are unaware because it occurs early in the perception process.

89
Q

Illusory conjunctions

A

Evidence for integration theory

Which one object can take on properties of an-other object because the attention was divided so it was hard to understand the shape and color.

90
Q

Attention and physiology

A

Attention Affects Physiological Responding

Attention has a number of different effects on the brain. One effect is to increase activity in areas of the brain that represent the attended location.