Cognitive approach

    Cards (6)

    • Assumptions
      • human informational processing is similar to a computer, with the info inputs, its stores and retrieves info and has various programmes that determine the response
      • the human mind is studied indirectly by making inferences based on behaviour
      • Well controlled lab studies used
    • Models
      • theoretical models - simplified, abstract diagrams of a cognitive process (e.g msm)
      • computer models - programmes that can be run on a computer to imitate the human mind (e.g ai chatbots)
    • Schemas
      • Ways we organise and store thoughts and info
      • Help us organise info that causes us to predict what’s coming next
      • allows us to take short cuts when dealing with large amounts of info
      • they can distort memory
    • Cognitive neuroscience
      • A discipline that is a combination of multiple disciplines - cognitive psychologists, cognitive science and neuroscience
      • different to cognitive psychology because it considers physiological reasons instead of just psychological.
      • uses brain imaging (PET, MRI and fMRI) to map brain areas to specific cognitive functions
    • Strengths
      • uses scientific and objective methods
      • uses controlled rigorous methods
      • 2 areas of cognitive and biological science come together to enhance scientific basis of study
      • can be applied to real life - helps to treat disorders specifically
    • Weaknesses
      • similarities between human mind and computers but the computer analogy has been criticised (emotion can affect behaviour)
      • use of inference means cognitive psychology can occasionally be too abstract