cognitive approach

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    • cognitive approach
      behaviour is determined by the way we process information taken in from our environment using our internal mental processes
    • mental processes
      perception, attention, memory, language, thinking and problem solving
    • key assumptions
      focuses on how people perceive, store, manipulate and interpret information
      cognitive psychologists look at internal mental processes to understand behaviour
      thought processes can and should be studied scientifically, well controlled laboratory studies can investigate what we are thinking
      mental processes are 'private' and cant be observed, cognitive psychologists study them indirectly by making inferences about what is going on inside people's head
    • schemas
      'package' of beliefs & expectations on a topic that come from prior experience
      useful by helping us to take shortcuts in thinking, and organise and interpret information
      born with simple motor schema for innate behaviours e.g. grasping and sucking then develop and evolve from experience
      can lead to faulty conclusions and unhelpful behaviour
    • piaget's theory of cognitive development
      we build schemas through experience using two methods:
      assimilation - we add more information to our schema that we didnt previously have before
      accommodation - having to adapt or change schema as a result of new information
    • bugelski + alampay (1962)

      'rat man' study
      two groups shown a sequence of pictures, either faces or animals before the ambiguous 'rat man'
      people who saw pictures of animals were more likely to see a rat, whereas people who saw pictures of people were more likely to see a man
    • strengths of bugelski + alampay
      high internal validity
      replicable due to high levels of control so same results obtained each time
    • limitations of bugelski + alampay
      demand characteristics
      lacks external validity
    • inference
      reaching a logical conclusion on the basis of evidence and reasoning
    • role of theoretical models
      simplified representations of the mind based on current research
    • computer models
      uses computer analogy: information passes through senses, is processed within our mind (memory) and then after this processing we produce an output (behaviour)
    • paul broca (1861)

      51 year old male was transferred to broca's hospital with an infection
      had difficulty with speech and could only say "tan"
      post mortem dissection found there was a lesion in left frontal lobe
      broca's area - responsible for speech reproduction
    • how are biological structures investigated
      advances with brain imaging techniques (pet scans and MRI)