Modterm 1- Lecture Notes Flashcards

1
Q

Cognitive psychology broken down into

A

Human experimental psychology: memory, attention, problem solving, language

Computer psychology: artificial intelligence and computer stimulation

Cognitive neuroscience: brain damage and effect on cognition

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2
Q

Information theory

A

The information provided by a particular event is inversely related to the probability of its occurrence;
Signal that provides more information = slower reaction time

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3
Q

Hick-Hyman Law of Cognitive Information Processing

A

Increasing the number of choices a person has will increase the decision time logarithmically

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4
Q

The timing of information processing depends on:

A
  • the frequency of the information

- the number of response alternatives

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5
Q

Broadbent Filter model

A

-Nervous system as one info processing chan el
-Rate of information processing is restricted by channel capacity
Senses–> short term memory store–> filter (selection in basis physical characteristics only)–> selected input for attention
What info is processed depends on:
Capacity limits
Active selection of information

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6
Q

Information that is not selected is lost

A

Ie rehearsal is required to go from primary memory/ short term memory into secondary memory/ long term memory

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7
Q

JJ Gibson

A
  • meaning of objects perceived via affordances

- function of perception is not to describe some objective external reality BUT to serve biological needs

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8
Q

Affordances

A

Affordances are all action possibilities latent in the environment

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9
Q

Ecological approach

A
  • A form of psychological inquiry that reflects conditions in the real world
  • involves assumptions of “information pickup” learning becomes attuned to what the environment affords
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10
Q

Bottom up influence

A

The influence of the stimulus in the resulting perceptual experience

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11
Q

Top down influence

A

The influence of context and observers knowledge, expectations, and goals in perceptual experience

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12
Q

Neuron

A

Basic building block of the nervous system; receive and pass nerve impulses to other neurons

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13
Q

Law of mass action

A

Learning and memory depend on the total mass of brain tissue remaining rather than the properties of individual cells

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14
Q

Law of equipotentiality

A

Any part of a cortical area (within limits) can do the job of any other part of the same area

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15
Q

PET (positron emission tomography)

A
  • all cognitive activities accompanied by an increase demand for energy (oxygen, glucose) within localized areas brain
  • active parts of brain = more blood flow
  • track changes in blood flow with radioactive tracer
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16
Q

fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging)

A
  • indirectly detects uptake oxygen by active brain cells
  • BOLD = changes in ratio of oxygenated blood to deoxygenated blood measured by magnetic detectors in an MRI machine
  • excellent spatial resolution
  • faster than PET
17
Q

Semantic richness

A

The amount of meaning associated with a concept

18
Q

ERP (event related potentials)

A

Uses EEG to measure voltage fluctuations at surface if brain

  • short tempting window
  • less expensive
  • poor spatial resolution (limited ability to detect brain areas responsible for vintage fluctuations)
19
Q

MEG (magnetoencephalography)

A
  • registration changes in magnetic streams induced by voltage fluctuation- short temp rial windo- spatial resolution better than EEG, best for studying cortical structures, expensive
20
Q

Interactionism

A

The mind and brain are desperate entities that interact and influence each other
- do not necessarily share the same structure