Cognitive approach

    Cards (9)

    • assumptions
      -internal mental processes (private operations of the mind such as perception and attention that mediate between stimulus and response) should be studied.
      • study memory, perception and thinking
      • private and can’t be observed so study them indirectly by making inferences about what’s going on inside peoples mind
    • Schema
      = mental framework of beliefs and expectations that influence cognitive processing. Developed from experience
    • Role of schema
      Packages of ideas and information developed through experience, act as a mental framework for the interpretation of incoming information received by the cognitive system
      • learned through experience so helps you respond to something appropriately
      • babies born with simple motor schema for innate behaviour such as sucking and grasping
      • as we get older our schema becomes more detailed and sophisticated, adults have developed mental representations for everything
      • enable us to process information quickly and acts as a mental shortcut
    • Theoretical and computer models
      Cognitive psychologists use both theoretical and computer models
      • information processing approach= suggests information flows through the cognitive system in a sequence of stages- input, storage and retrieval
      • based on the way computers function
    • Emerge of cognitive neuroscience
      = study of the influence of brain structures on mental processes. Mapping areas of the brain to specific cognitive functions.
      • advances in technology fMRI and PET scans= can systematically observe and describe neurological basis of mental processes. Eg: Tulving- show different types of LTM may be located on opposite sides of the prefrontal cortex
    • Evaluation- scientific methods
      = objective scientific methods
      • highly controlled and rigorous methods of study so researchers can infer cognitive processes at work.
      • use of lab studies to produce reliable and objective data.
      • cognitive psychology and cognitive neuroscience can merge together
    • Evaluation-counterpoint
      Relies on inference of mental processes rather than direct observation of behaviour (too abstract)
      • artificial stimuli may not represent everyday experience
      • lack external validity
    • Evaluation- real world application
      Contributions in field of artificial intelligence and development of thinking machines
      • applied to treatment of depression and improved reliability of eyewitness testimony
    • Evaluation- machine reductionism
      Machine reductionism ignores the influence of human emotion and motivation on the cognitive system and may affect our ability to process information
      • research has found that human memory may be affected by emotional factors like influence of anxiety on EWT.
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