PSY 322 Exam 3 Flashcards

1
Q

Eye-witness testimony:
What is it, what are the problems with it:

A

Testimony by an eyewitness to a crime about what he or she saw during the crime
Like other memory, eyewitness testimony can be inaccurate: Mistaken identity, Constructive nature of memory

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2
Q

Eye-witness testimony:
Relevant studies

A

Wells and Bradfield (1998): Participants view security videotape with gunman in view for 8 seconds, Everyone identified someone as the gunman from photographs afterward, The actual gunman’s picture was not presented → Errors due to attention and arousal
Stanny and Johnson - weapons focus experiment: Presence of a weapon that was fired is associated with a decrease in memory about the perpetrator, the victim, and the weapon → Errors due to familiarity: Source monitoring AND Errors due to suggestion: Suggestive questioning - The misinformation effect, Confirming feedback - Post-identification feedback effect

Wells and Bradfield’s “Good, You Identified the Suspect” experiment: The type of feedback from the experimenter influenced subjects’ confidence in their identification, with confirming feedback resulting in the highest confidence. Confidence in one’s memories may be increased by postevent questioning/ May make memories easier to retrieve

Hyman and coworkers (1995): False Memories - Participants’ parents gave descriptions of childhood experiences. Participant had conversation about experiences with experimenter; experimenter added new events. When discussing it later, participant “remembered” the new events as actually happening

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3
Q

Eye-witness testimony:
How can we make it better?

A

Inform witness that perpetrator might not be in lineup, Use “fillers” in lineup similar to suspect, Use sequential presentation (not simultaneous), Improve interviewing techniques like cognitive interview

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4
Q

Conceptual knowledge:

Concept:

Categorization:

Categories Are Useful:

A

Conceptual knowledge: enables us to recognize objects and events and to make inferences about their properties

Concept: mental representation used for a variety of cognitive functions

Categorization: the process by which things are placed into groups called categories – Categories are all possible examples of a particular concept

Categories Are Useful: Help to understand individual cases not previously encountered - “Pointers to knowledge” → Categories provide a wealth of general information about an item, Allow us to identify the special characteristics of a particular item, Provides general info with no need to start from scratch

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5
Q

Definitional approach to categorization - What is it, what are its problems

A

Determine category membership based on whether the object meets the definition of the category, Not all members of everyday categories have the same defining features like different objects, all possible “chairs.”

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6
Q

Family resemblance

A

Definitional approach to categorization - Things in a category resemble one another in a number of ways, but do not have to share every feature - participation exercise

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7
Q

Prototype (Typical) approach to categorization

Example Birds: Three real birds—a sparrow, a robin, and a blue jay - “prototype” is

Results of Rosch’s (1975a) experiment:

Typicality effect:

High prototypicality:

Low prototypicality:

Low overlap:

Results of E.E. Smith et al.’s (1974):

A

Definitional approach to categorization - An abstract representation of the “typical” member of a category, characteristic features that describe what members of that concept are like, an average of category members encountered in the past, contains the most salient features, true of most instances of that category

Example Answer: bird that is the average representation of the category “birds.”

Results of Rosch’s (1975a) experiment: in which participants judged objects on a scale of 1 (good example of a category) to 7 (poor example): (a) ratings for birds; (b) ratings for furniture. Procedure for Rosch’s (1975b) priming experiment. Results for the conditions when the test colors were the same are shown on the right. (a) The person’s “green” prototype matches the good green, but (b) is a poor match for the light green. How Rosch explains the finding that priming resulted in faster “same” judgments for prototypical colors than for non prototypical colors. Typicality effect

Typicality effect(explained by the Exemplar Approach): prototypical objects are processed preferentially – Highly prototypical objects judged/named more rapidly - Sentence verification technique

High prototypicality: a category member closely resembles the category prototype - “Typical” member For category “bird” = robin

Low prototypicality: a category member does not closely resemble the category prototype - For category “bird” = penguin

Low overlap = low family resemblance and large amount of overlap with characteristics of other items in the category, the family resemblance of these items is high

Results of E.E. Smith et al.’s (1974): sentence verification experiment. Reaction times were faster for objects rated higher in prototypicality

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8
Q

Exemplar approach to categorization

Exemplars may work best for

Prototypes may work best for

A

Concept is represented by multiple examples (rather than a single prototype), Examples are actual category members (not abstract averages), To categorize, compare the new item to stored examples

Similar to prototype view (Representing a category is not defining it); Different (representation is not abstract - descriptions of specific examples)

The more similar a specific exemplar is to a known category member, the faster it will be categorized

Exemplars may work best for small categories

Prototypes may work best for larger categories

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9
Q

Levels of categories: global (superordinate), basic, specific (subordinate)

A

Global: Furniture or Vehicle

Basic: Table or Truck

Specific: Kitchen Table or Van

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10
Q

Why is the “basic” level special?

A

People almost exclusively use basic-level names in freenaming tasks

Quicker to identify basic-level category member as a member of a category

Children learn basic-level concepts sooner than other levels

Basic-level is much more common in adult discourse than names for superordinate categories

Different cultures tend to use the same basic-level categories, at least for living things

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11
Q

Hierarchical networks: Collins and Quillian (1969)’s model

Semantic Networks:
Node

Cognitive economy:

Exceptions:

Inheritance:

A

Semantic Networks: Concepts are arranged in networks that represent the way concepts are organized in the mind - Model for how concepts and properties are associated in the mind
Node = category/concept
Concepts are linked

Cognitive economy: shared properties are only stored at higher-level nodes

Exceptions: are stored at lower nodes

Inheritance: Lower-level items share properties of higher level items

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12
Q

Nonhierarchical (spreading activation) networks: Collins and Loftus (1975)’s model

Spreading Activation:

Lexical decision task:

Meyer and Schvaneveldt (1971):

A

Spreading Activation:
Activation is the arousal level of a node
When a node is activated, activity spreads out along all connected links
Concepts that receive activation are primed and more easily accessed from memory

Lexical decision task:
Participants read stimuli and are asked to say as quickly as possible whether the item is a word or not

Meyer and Schvaneveldt (1971):
“Yes” if both strings are words; “no” if not
Some pairs were closely associated
Reaction time was faster for those pairs
Spreading activation

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13
Q

Four proposals for how concepts are represented in the brain:

A

Sensory-Functional Hypothesis

Multiple-Factor Approach

Semantic Category Approach

Embodied Approach

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14
Q

Sensory-Functional Hypothesis:

A

Different brain areas may be specialized to process information about different categories
- Double dissociation for categories “living things” and “nonliving things” (artifacts)
- Category-specific memory impairment

Sensory-functional hypothesis:
living things → sensory properties
artifacts → functions

Performance on a naming task for patients K.C. and E.W., both of whom had category specific memory impairment. They were able to correctly name pictures of nonliving things (such as car and table) and fruits and vegetables (such as tomato and pear) but performed poorly when asked to name pictures of animals.

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15
Q

Multiple-Factor Approach:

A

Distributed representation: how concepts are divided within a category
Animals → motion and color
Artifacts → actions (using, interacting)

Crowding: when different concepts within a category share many properties
For example, “animals” all share “eyes,” “legs,” and “the ability to move”

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16
Q

Semantic Category Approach:

A

Specific neural circuits for specific categories

Figure 9.24 Results of the Huth et al. (2016) experiment in which participants listened to stories in a scanner. (a) Words that activate different places on the cortex. (b) Close-up of a smaller area of cortex. Note that a particular area usually responded to a number of different words, as indicated in Figure 9.25.

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17
Q

Embodied Approach:

A

Knowledge of concepts is based on reactivation of sensory and motor processes that occur when we interact with the object.

Mirror neurons: fire when we do a task or we observe another doing that same task

Semantic somatotopy: correspondence between words related to specific body parts and the location of brain activation

Figure 9.26 Hauk et al. (2004) results. Colored areas indicate the areas of the brain activated by (a) foot, finger, and tongue movements; (b) leg, arm, and face words.

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18
Q

Mental imagery/Visual imagery: what is it

A

Visual imagery: “seeing” in the absence of a visual stimulus

Provides a way of thinking that adds another dimension to purely verbal techniques

Mental imagery: experiencing a sensory impression in the absence of sensory input

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19
Q

Paivio’s conceptual peg hypothesis: concrete vs abstract words

Paired-associate learning:

Conceptual peg hypothesis:

Pegword technique:

Proposed that imagery is propositional:

A

Paired-associate learning: Developed ways to measure behavior that could be used to infer cognitive processes

Conceptual peg hypothesis: Memory for words that evoke mental images is better than for those that do not

Pegword technique: Associate items to be remembered with concrete words → Pair each of these things with a pegword - Create a vivid image of things to be remembered with the object represented by the word

Proposed that imagery is propositional: Can be represented by abstract symbols

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20
Q

Mental rotation experiments (i.e. Shepard and Metzler):

Mental chronometry:

A

Mental chronometry: Participants mentally rotate one object to see if it matched another object

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21
Q

Links between imagery and perception

Mental scanning:

Like perception, imagery is

A

Spatial correspondence between imagery and perception
Mental scanning: Participants create mental images and then scan them in their minds

Memorize a picture and create an image of it - In image, move from one part of the picture to the other. It took longer for participants to mentally move long distances than shorter distances.

Like perception, imagery is spatial

22
Q

Kosslyn’s early work: island example

A

Island with seven locations, 21 trips

It took longer to scan between greater distances.

Visual imagery is spatial.

(a) Island used in Kosslyn et al.’s (1978) image-scanning experiment. Participants mentally traveled between various locations on the island. (b) Results of the island experiment.

23
Q

Kosslyn vs. Pylyshyn: spatial representation vs. proportional representation

Spatial representation is an

Proposed that imagery is

Imagery debate
Propositional representation:
Depictive representation:

Is Imagery Spatial(actually imagine in mind one to one representation) or Propositional(not spaceily broken up into separate pieces and then extracted meaning and put into words in the mind)?
Kosslyn’s results can be explained by

A

Spatial representation is an epiphenomenon. - person who when thinking hard about something you look up and to the right a thinking pose, if you didn’t look up and to the right doesn’t mean you can’t think it is not what gives you the bailey to think - it simply accompanies the act or phenomena - Accompanies real mechanism but is not actually a part of it

Proposed that imagery is propositional - Can be represented by abstract symbols

Imagery debate:
Propositional representation: symbols, language
Depictive representation: similar to realistic pictures

Is Imagery Spatial(actually imagine in mind one to one representation) or Propositional(not spaceily broken up into separate pieces and then extracted meaning and put into words in the mind)?
Kosslyn’s results can be explained by using real-word knowledge unconsciously - Tacit-knowledge explanation

24
Q

Mental walk tasks

A

Relationship between viewing distance and ability to perceive details
- Imagine small object next to large object
- Quicker to detect details on the larger object
- Moving closer to an object, such as this car, has two effects: (1) The object fills more of your visual field, and (2) details are easier to see.

Mental walk task
- Move closer to small animals than to large animals
- Images are spatial, like perception

25
Q

Imagery in the brain: neurons that respond to BOTH imagery and perception of an object

A

Visual cortex

Complete overlap of activation by perception and imagery in front of the brain

Differences near back of the brain - more in perception

Mental images more fragile, less activation keeps other things from interfering

Brain activity in response to imagery
May indicate something is happening
May not cause imagery

26
Q

TMS

A

Creates reversible lesions in humans by creating a magnetic field that influences electrical properties of the brain

Decreases brain functioning in a particular area of the brain for a short time

If behavior is disrupted, the deactivated part of the brain is causing that behavior

TMS to visual area of brain during perception and imagery task

27
Q

Unilateral neglect

A

Patient ignores objects in one half of visual field in perception and imagery

28
Q

Dissociations between imagery and perception: M.G.S., R.M., C.K.

A

M.G.S
Results of the mental walk task for patient M.G.S. Left: Before her operation, she could mentally “walk” to within 15 feet before the image of the horse overflowed her visual field. Right: After removal of the right occipital lobe, the size of the visual field was reduced, and she could mentally approach only to within 35 feet of the horse before it overflowed her visual field.

R.M.
- Damage to occipital and parietal lobes
- Could draw accurate pictures of objects in front of him
- Could not draw accurate pictures of objects from memory (using imagery)

C.K.
- Inability to name pictures of objects, even his own drawings, in front of him
- Could draw objects in great detail from memory (using imagery)

Evidence for a double dissociation between imagery and perception - Indicates separate mechanisms, Also evidence for shared mechanisms:

Visual perception involves bottom-up processing; located at lower and higher visual centers

Imagery is a top-down process; located at higher visual centers

Explains C.K. and R.M. but not M.G.S.

29
Q

What is “language”, why is it special, how does it differ from “communication”

Language

Hierarchical system –

Governed by rules –

The Universality of Language:

A

Language: System of communication using sounds or symbols
Express feelings, thoughts, ideas, and experiences

Hierarchical system – Components that can be combined to form larger units

Governed by rules – Specific ways components can be arranged

The Universality of Language:
- Deaf children invent sign language
- All cultures have a language
Language development is similar across cultures
- Languages are “unique but the same”
- Different words, sounds, and rules
- All have nouns, verbs, negatives, questions, past/present tense

30
Q

Skinner vs. Chomsky:

A

B.F. Skinner (1957) Verbal Behavior - nurture
Language learned through reinforcement

Noam Chomsky (1957) Syntactic Structures - nature
Human language coded in the genes
Underlying basis of all language is similar
Children produce sentences they have never heard and that have never been reinforced

31
Q

Psycholinguistics:

A

Psycholinguistics: the study of language comprehension, production, and acquisition

Psycholinguistics: discover psychological process by which humans acquire and process language

32
Q

Lexicon:

Phoneme:

Morphemes:

Lexical semantics:

Syntax:

Semantics:

Event-related potential and brain imaging studies have shown syntax and semantics:

Age of Acquisition:

Word Length:

Contextual constraint:

A

Lexicon: all words a person understands

Phoneme: shortest segment of speech that, if changed, changes the meaning of the word (building blocks of spoken language) - “Fill in” missing phonemes based on context of sentence and portion of word presented

Morphemes: smallest unit of language that has meaning or grammatical function

Lexical semantics: the meaning of words – Each word has one or more meanings

Syntax: rules for combining words into sentences

Semantics: meanings of words and sentences

Event-related potential and brain imaging studies have shown syntax and semantics are may be associated with different mechanisms

Age of Acquisition: Words learned earlier in life are processed faster than those learned later

Word Length: Shorter words are processed faster than longer words, and are often skipped in sentence reading

Contextual constraint: Words in highly constrained sentences are processed faster and more likely to be skipped

33
Q

Speech segmentation: how do we do it?

A

Speech segmentation – Perception of individual words even though there are no silences between spoken words (interword spaces one word starts and other ends)

Context
Understanding of meaning
Understanding of sound and syntactic rules
Statistical learning

34
Q

Word frequency effect:

Lexical ambiguity:

Meaning dominance:

Biased dominance:

Balanced dominance:

Dominance is determined by

A

Word frequency effect:
- We respond faster to high-frequency words
- Rayner and Duffy (1986) fixation and gaze times
- Eye movements while reading
- Look at low-frequency words longer

Lexical ambiguity:
- Words have more than one meaning
- Context clears up ambiguity after all meanings of a word have been briefly accessed

Meaning dominance: Some meanings of words are used more frequently than others

Biased dominance: When words have two or more meanings with different dominance

Balanced dominance: When words have two or more meanings with about the same dominance

Dominance is determined by frequency of use in written language

35
Q

Parsing:

Syntactic ambiguity:
Garden

Syntax-first approach to parsing:

Interactionist (constraint-based) approach to parsing:

A

Parsing: mental grouping of words in a sentence into phrases – Helps the listener create meaning - Parsing is the process that occurs when a person hears or reads a string of words (Words in) and groups these words into phrases in their mind (Parsed sentence in mind). The way the words are grouped in this example indicates that the person has interpreted the sentence to mean that the musician played the piano and then left the stage.

Syntactic ambiguity: more than one possible structure, more than one meaning
Garden path sentences – Sentences that begin by appearing to mean one thing, but then end up meaning something else

Syntax-first approach to parsing:
- Listeners use heuristics (rules) to group words into phrases
- Grammatical structure of sentence determines parsing
- Late closure: parser assumes new word is part of the current phrase
- A.k.a. the Garden-path model

Interactionist (constraint-based) approach to parsing:
Semantics influence processing as one reads a sentence, along with syntax
- Word meaning
- Memory load
- Story context

36
Q

Understanding text and stories

Coherence:

Inference:
Anaphoric:
Instrumental:
Causal:

Situation model:
Results of Stanfield and Zwaan’s (2001) and Zwaan
Physiology of simulations:

A

Coherence: representation of the text in one’s mind so that information from one part of the text can be related to information in another part of the text
Between parts of text
Also, between local parts of text and the overall topic of the story

Inference: readers create information during reading not explicitly stated in the text
- Anaphoric: connecting objects/people
- Instrumental: tools or methods
- Causal: events in one clause caused by events in previous sentence

Situation model: mental representation of what a text is about - Represent events as if experiencing the situation, Point of view of protagonist
Results of Stanfield and Zwaan’s (2001) and Zwaan et al. ‘s (2002) experiments. Subjects responded “yes” more rapidly for the orientation, in (a), and the shape, in (b), that was more consistent with the sentence.
Hauk et al. (2004) results. Colored areas indicate the areas of the brain activated by (a) foot, finger, and tongue movements; (b) leg, arm, and face words.

Physiology of simulations: Approximately the same areas of the cortex are activated by actual movements and by reading related action words. The activation is more extensive for actual movements

37
Q

Understanding Sentences: Memory Load

Object-relative construction
Subject-relative construction

A

Two sentence examples:
“The senator who spotted the reporter shouted.” – Subject-relative construction

“The senator who the reporter spotted shouted.” – Object-relative construction

Subject-relative construction is more common in English (65% of sentences)

Object-relative construction performance is slower in English speakers due to higher memory load

38
Q

Understanding Sentences: Story Context

Tannenhaus and coworkers (1995)

Supported?

Ambiguous:

Unambiguous:

A

Supported - interaction/constraint based approach support bc eye movement not just rely on syntax

Visual world paradigm, the context of a scene
Eye movements change when information suggests revision of interpretation of sentence is necessary
Syntactic and semantic information used simultaneously

Ambiguous: “Place the apple on the towel in the box”

Unambiguous: “Place the apple that’s on the towel in the box

39
Q

Not all of the members of everyday categories have the same features. Most fish have gills, fins, and scales. Sharks lack the feature of scales, yet they are still categorized as fish. This poses a problem for the _______ approach to categorization.

a. prototype
b. exemplar
c. definitional
d. family resemblance

A

c. definitional

40
Q

______ is an average representation of a category.

a. A prototype
b. An exemplar
c. A unit
d. A component

A

a. A prototype

41
Q

If you say that “a Labrador retriever is my idea of a typical dog,” you would be using the _____ approach to categorization.

a. exemplar
b. definitional
c. family resemblance
d. prototype

A

a. exemplar

42
Q

According to Collins and Quillian’s semantic network model, it should take longest to verify which statement below?

a. Pigs are pigs.
b. A pig is an animal.
c. A pig is a pig.
d. A pig is a mammal.

A

b. A pig is an animal.

43
Q

Shepard and Metzler measured the time it took for participants to decide whether two objects were the same (two different views of the same object) or different (two different objects). These researchers inferred cognitive processes by using

a. image scanning.
b. mental chronometry.
c. epiphenomena.
d. propositional representations.

A

b. mental chronometry.

44
Q

Mental-scanning experiments found

a. a positive linear relationship between scanning time and distance on the image.
b. a negative linear relationship between scanning time and distance on the image.
c. a constant scanning time for all locations on an image.
d. that imagery does not represent spatial relations in the same way perceptual information does.

A

a. a positive linear relationship between scanning time and distance

45
Q

Kosslyn interpreted the results of his research on imagery (such as the island experiment) as supporting the idea that the mechanism responsible for imagery involves ____ representations.

a. epiphenomenal
b. propositional
c. spatial
d. unilateral

A

c. spatial

46
Q

In their imagery study, Finke and Pinker presented a four-dot display briefly to participants. After a two-second delay, participants then saw an arrow, and their task was to indicate whether the arrow would have pointed to any of the dots in the previous display. The significance of their results was they called into question the ____ explanation of imagery.

a. epiphenomenon
b. depictive representation
c. spatial representation
d. tacit-knowledge

A

d. tacit-knowledge

47
Q

Which property below is NOT one of the characteristics that makes human language unique?

a. Hierarchical structure
b. Communication
c. Governed by rules
d. all of these make human language unique

A

b. Communication

48
Q

B.F. Skinner, the modern champion of behaviorism, proposed that language is learned through

a. parsing.
b. genetic coding.
c. syntactic framing.
d. reinforcement.

A

d. reinforcement.

49
Q

Noam Chomsky proposed that

a. humans are genetically programmed to acquire and use language.
b. language is learned through the mechanism of reinforcement.
c. as children learn language, they produce only sentences they have heard before.
d. the underlying basis of language is different across cultures.

A

a. humans are genetically programmed to acquire and use language.

50
Q

Which of the following is the best example of a garden path sentence?

a. Before the police stopped the Toyota disappeared into the night.
b. The man was not surprised when he found several spiders, roaches, and other bugs in the corner of the room.
c. The cats won’t bake.
d. The fishermen were frightened by the walrus.

A

a. Before the police stopped the Toyota disappeared into the night.