Cognitive Psychology, Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
Kartei Details
Karten | 51 |
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Sprache | Deutsch |
Kategorie | Psychologie |
Stufe | Universität |
Erstellt / Aktualisiert | 05.10.2012 / 23.02.2017 |
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What usually applies to Self-Reports?
Information about Indvidual differences
What are the strengths of Self-Reports?
Access to introspective insights from participants' point of view, which may be unavailable via other means.
What are the weaknesses of Self-Reports?
Inability to report on processes occuring outside conscious awareness.
Verbal protocols & self ratings: Data gathering may influence cognitive processes being reported
Recollections: Possible discrepancies between actual cognition and recollected cognitive processes and products
Explain Case Studies!
Engage in intensive study of single individuals, drawing general conclusions about behavior.
What usually applies to Case studies?
Information about individual differences and highly ecological validity for indivual cases.
What are the strengths of Case studies?
Access to richly detailed information about individuals, including information about historical and current contexts, which may not be available via other means.
What are the weaknesses of Case studies?
Applicability to other persons; small sample size and nonrepresentativeness of sample generally limits generalizability to population.
What do Naturastilic Observations?
Observe real-life situations, as in classrooms, work settings or homes
What are the strengths of natural observations?
Access to rich contextual information, which may be unavailable via other means
What are the weaknesses of Naturalistic observations?
Lack of experimental control.
Possible influence on naturalistic behavior due to the presence of the observer.
What are INDEPENDENT variables?
They are aspects of an investigation that are indvidually MANIPULATED, or carefully regulated, by the experimenter, while other aspects are held constant.
What are DEPENDENT variables?
They are outcome responses, the values of which depend on how one or more independent variables influence or affect the participants in the experiment.
What are CONTROL variables?
They are irrelevant variables that are held constant.
What are CONFOUNDING variables?
They are a type of irrelevant variable that has been left uncontrolled in a study.
Which method do cognitive psychologists often use when they study cognitive processes with reaction time?
They often use the substraction method, which involves estimating the time a cognitive process takes by substracting the amount of time information processing takes with the process from the time it takes without the process.
What is cognitive psychology?
The study of how people perceive, lern, remember, and think about information.
The progression of ideas involves a dialectic. What is this pattern?
- A THESIS is proposed. A thesis is a statement of belief.
- An ANTITHESIS emerges. An antithesis is a statement that counters a previous statement of belief.
- The debate between thesis and antithesis leads to a SYNTHESIS.
Who observed the dialectical progression of ideas?
Georg Hegel, a german philosopher.
Where has cognitive psychology its roots?
What does Philosophy seek to understand?
Philosophy seeks to understand the general nature of many aspects of the world, in part through introspection (the examination of inner ideas and experiences).
What does Physiology seek?
Physiology seeks a scientific study of life-sustaining functions in living matter, primarily through empirical (observation-based) methods.
Explain rationalism!
A rationalist believes that the route to knowledge is through LOGICAL analysis.
René Descartes believed that the introspective, reflective method was superior to empirical methods for finding truth (origins: Plato).
Explain empiricism!
An empiricist believes that we aquire knowledge via empirical evidence - through EXPERIENCE and OBSERVATION.
British empiricist John Locke believed that empirical observation was the best way for finding truth (origins: Aristotle)
Who dialectically synthesized the views of Decartes and Locke?
German philosopher Immanuel Kant synthesized both views. Both must work together.
Explain Structuralism!
Structuralism was the first major school of thought in psychology.
It seeks to understand the structure of the mind and its perceptions by
analyzing those perceptions into their constituent components.
Example: a flower; analyze colors,geometric forms, size, and so on
Wilhelm WUNDT used INTROSPECTION for analyzing our own perceptions.
One follower of Wundt was US scientist Edward TITCHENER.
Explain Functionalism!
It focuses on the processes of thought.
Functionalism tries to understand what people DO and WHY.
Natural functionalism has led to pragmatism.
What do pragmatists believe?
They believe that knowledge is validated by its usefulness.
What can you DO with it? They also want to do what you can do WITH knowledge of what people do.
Pragmatists believe in the importance of psychology of learning and memory.
Important person: WILLIAM JAMES - book: Principles of Psychology
also: John DEWEY
Explain Associationism!
Associationism examines how events or ideas can become associated with one another in the mind to result in a form of learning.
For example: associations may result from contiguity, similarity or contrast
important person: Hermann Ebbinghaus - the first experimenter to apply associationist principles systematically. Studied how people learn and remember. REHEARSAL is the conscious repetition of to-be-learned material.
Edward Lee THORNDIKE said that the role of "satisfaction" is the key to forming associations = law of effect
What is contiguity?
associating things that tend to occur together at about the same time
What is similarity
Associating things with similar features or properties
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