Block 4 - Cognitive psychology - Lecture 1 - Intro Flashcards

1
Q

What is Gestalt psychology?

A

emphasises organised units in perception and behaviour that cannot be reduced to their component parts

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2
Q

Wundt?

A
  • used introspection (the observation of one’s perceptions)
  • determined there was 7 qualities of sensations:
    -> visual
    -> auditory
    -> olfactory
    -> gustatory
    -> cutaneous
    -> kinesthetic
    -> organic
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3
Q

Functionalism - James?

A
  • to find the meaning out of an idea you have to look at its consequences
  • emphasis on cause and effect and observation of behaviour in the environment
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4
Q

What is cognitive psychology?

A
  • understanding the mental processes that allow us to make sense of our environment
  • generating descriptions of how these mental processes function - flow chart
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5
Q

What is the mind/body problem - Searle 1994?

A
  • type identity theory = a mental state is equivalent to a specific pattern of neural events
  • 2 brain problem = 2 people can have the same thought but have different patterns of neural events
  • token identity theory = a mental state maps onto a variety of different neural events
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6
Q

Information processing analogy?

A
  • human cognition = flow of information or signals
  • psychologists can measure cognition by measuring signal processing looking at redundancy, reaction time and capacity
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7
Q

The computational metaphor of the mind?

A
  • input -> processing -> output
  • brains are like computer hardware
  • cognition is software
  • the mind contains symbolic representations that are stored in memory
  • cognition is the product of operations
  • mental processes are like computer programmes that transform representations
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8
Q

What are the 3 levels of description - Marr 1982?

A
  1. computational theory level
    -> what is the function of cognition
  2. Representation and algorithm level
    -> how does cognition work
  3. hardware level
    -> how are the representations instantiated in the real world
    - primary interest as cognitive psychologists = levels 1 + 2
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9
Q

Modularity - Fodor 1983?

A
  • human cognitions = organised into mental modules
  • each fulfils a specific function:
    1. horizontal faculties = general competencies used across domains
    2. vertical faculties = domain specific cognitive functions and processes
  • modules correspond to different brain areas
  • module processing is fast
  • cognition involves the activation of horizontal and vertical faculties
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10
Q

Input systems, central processors and effector systems?

A
  • psychologists draw a distinction between input systems (typically vertical faculties) and central processors
  • input systems = process incoming sensory information, transfer information to central processors, domain specific (only process a particular class of information)
  • central processor = makes decisions, plans actions, not modular
  • effector systems = execute responses
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11
Q

What methods are used to identify modules?

A
  • key technique = dissociation = a manipulation that affects one cognitive task but not a different task
  • e.g. articulatory suppression disrupts verbal/ phonological short-term memory but not spatial short term memory = evidence that the are 2 separate modules
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12
Q

Patient HM - Scoville & Milner 1957?

A
  • Neurosurgery to cure epilepsy
  • Severe anterograde amnesia: couldn’t form new memories
  • Short term memory ok + could learn new skills
  • LTM, STM and procedural memory must be different systems
  • Revolutionised understanding of how memory functions
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