Chapter 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is cognitive psychology?

A

The scientific study of the processes and products of the human mind

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2
Q

Sensation/absorption is…

A

taking information in from the world around you

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3
Q

Processing/perception/computation/integration is…

A

Making sense of sensory information

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4
Q

Responding is…

A

decisions and action

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5
Q

What is information theory

A

Posits that the information provided by a particular message is inversely related to the probability of its occurrence; the less likely it is, the more information it conveys

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6
Q

Hick & Hyman experiment

A

Takes time to process neural signal into key press etc..

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7
Q

Two limitations of info theory

A

o Amount of time it takes for into to flow through the nervous system (and visual system)
o Nervous system has a capacity of how much info it can handle in a given time frame

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8
Q

Filter Model

A

A theory based on the idea that information processing is restricted by channel capacity

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9
Q

Channel Capacity

A

The maximum amount of information that can be transmitted by an information- processing device

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10
Q

Describe what the filter model looks like

A

o When 2+ signals enter at the same time, they enter the sensory buffer (sensory store) together.
o Buffer extracts characteristics.
o Filter selects messages that share basic physical characteristics and passes them on to the limited capacity system responsible for analysis of higher order stimulus attributes.
o Unselected messages are held in the sensory buffer.

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11
Q

What task did Broadbent use to test his model

A

o One of the ways Broadbent achieved this was by simultaneously sending one message (a 3-digit number) to a person’s right ear and a different message (a different 3-digit number) to their left ear. Participants were asked to listen to both messages at the same time and repeat what they heard - people made fewer mistakes repeating back ear by ear and would usually repeat back this way.

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12
Q

Waugh and Norman’s model of Information Processing

A

proved that participants ability to recall letters declined as the number of interfering items increased (not rehearsing the letters)

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13
Q

Brown Peterson Task

A

An experimental paradigm in which subjects are given a set of items and then a number. Subjects immediately begin counting backward by threes from the number and, after a specific interval, are asked to recall the original items

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14
Q

Ecological Approach

A

A form of psychological inquiry that reflects conditions in the real world

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15
Q

Primary Memory

A

What we are aware of in the “immediately present moment”; often termed “immediate memory” or “short-term memory”

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16
Q

Secondary Memory

A

Knowledge acquired at an earlier time that is stored indefinitely, and is absent from awareness; also called “long-term memory”

17
Q

Information Pickup

A

Process whereby we perceive information directly

18
Q

Neisser

A

Proposed cyclical model of cognition where the person possesses schema

19
Q

Perceptual Cycle

A

the process whereby our schemas guide our expectations of the world and in turn are shaped by what we find there

20
Q

Cognitive Ethology

A

links real world observations with laboratory-based studies

21
Q

Metagocnition

A

the way that cognitive processes work; understanding our own cognitive processes

22
Q

Instrospection & its limitations

A

Self-analyzing your mental processes or “Looking inward” to observe one’s own thoughts and feelings

Difficult to verify, you aren’t always aware, and you only see end products

23
Q

Freudian Theory

A

The unconscious mind; dreams as a safe place; Mental processes that are going on that you can’t be aware of, but nonetheless affect you

24
Q

Behaviourism

A

What goes on in the world and how you behave in response

If you can’t see it, you can’t study it

25
Q

Cognitivism

A

Input (sensory) ->Processes (computations) ->Output (motor commands)

26
Q

The pineal gland

A

only part of the brain he discovered that doesn’t exist on both sides – right in the core middle of the brain – Descartes thought it was special – said it is the place where the soul interacts with the brain, helping to produce behaviour

27
Q

Undifferentiated Mass

A

no specialized areas; all areas do everything

28
Q

Phrenology

A

The study of the shape, size, and protrusions of the cranium in an attempt to discover the relationships between parts of the brain and various mental activities and abilities

29
Q

Alexander Luria

A

A hierarchical view of brain organization – certain parts of the brain are in charge, others follow commands – front part of the brain calls the shots
Agreed that different areas of the brain do different things but wanted to also know how the different areas communicate  networks

30
Q

Resection of the corpus callosum (callosotomy)

A

Eliminates cortical cross-hemispheric communication