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Cognitive Psychology Exam 1
cog psych exam 1 at the u of u
120
Psychology
Undergraduate 3
02/03/2014

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Term
Who was associated with Structuralism? (2 people)
Definition
Wundt and Titchener
Term
When/Where was Structuralism dominant?
Definition
1880's-Germany
Term
What central question did Structuralism try to address?
Definition
"What are the basic elements of consciousness?"
Term
What methods were used in Structuralism?
Definition
Analytic introspection (believed in mentalistic and reductionistic)
Term
What aspects of Structuralism are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
The mentalistic approach
Term
Who was associated with Functionalism? (2 people)
Definition
James and Dewey
Term
When/Where was Functionalism dominant?
Definition
1880's-U.S.
Term
What central question did Functionalism try to address?
Definition
"What is the function of consciousness?"
Term
What methods were used in Functionalism?
Definition
Analytic introspection, techniques like reaction time, self-report (subjective types of measures). Mentalistic, focus on processes, applications.
Term
What aspects of Functionalism are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
The mentalistic approach
Term
Who was associated with Verbal Learning? (1 person)
Definition
Ebbinghaus
Term
When/Where was Verbal Learning dominant?
Definition
1880's, 1930's-Germany
Term
What central question did Verbal Learning try to address?
Definition
"How is new knowledge acquired?"
Term
What methods were used in Verbal Learning?
Definition
Empirical, objective, learning and forgetting curves
Term
What aspects of Verbal Learning are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
Empirical measures
Term
Who was associated with Behaviorism? (2 people)
Definition
Watson and Skinner
Term
When was Behaviorism dominant?
Definition
1910's, 1940's
Term
What central question did Behaviorism try to address?
Definition
"Behavior is important, not conscious experience."
Term
What methods were used in Behaviorism?
Definition
objective, anti-mentalistic, animal studies, classical conditioning (watson), operant conditioning (skinner).
Term
What aspects of Behaviorism are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
Empirical measures (objective)
Term
Who was associated with Information Theory? (1 person)
Definition
Miller
Term
When/Where was Information Theory dominant?
Definition
1950's-U.S.
Term
What central question did Information Theory try to address?
Definition
"How much information can be processed in a given time?"
Term
What methods were used in Information Theory?
Definition
Performance, capacity limitations
Term
What aspects of Information Theory are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
Performance
Term
How was Human Engineering developed? (no actual person associated)
Definition
Developed from technological advances and needs in WWII.
Term
When was Human Engineering dominant?
Definition
1940's and later.
Term
What central question did Human Engineering try to address?
Definition
"How to interact with technology"
Term
What methods were used in Human Engineering?
Definition
Performance, perception, decision-making
Term
What aspects of Human Engineering are still used in modern Cognitive Psychology?
Definition
Focus on performance.
Term
Who was associated with Linguistics? (1 person)
Definition
Chomsky
Term
When was Linguistics dominant?
Definition
1960's
Term
What central question did Linguistics try to address?
Definition
"Reinforcement cannot account for the complexity of language, important elements of language are innate."
Term
How did work in ethology and linguistics raise problems for Behaviorism?
Definition
Behaviorism couldn't account for some elements of animal behavior, such as fixed-action patterns and the critical period, which the ethologists discovered. They also couldn't account for human behavior in all cases, such as language being generative and that results of animal experiments didn't extend to human linguistic abilities, which linguistics discovered.
Term
Define Cognition.
Definition
Cognition is the collection of mental processes used in perceiving, thinking, remembering.
Term
What are 2 assumptions of the Cognitive Approach?
Definition
1) asks which are the important questions to ask. we must pick a starting point, because we can't study everything at once. starting point is biased.
2) concerns beliefs about the mind (can be very general and vague) that affect how everyone thinks about vision, attention or memory before knowing anything about them.
Term
Give an example (and explain the logic) of how response time (RT) can be used to measure mental processes.
Definition
example: what is 39+53? what is 2+2? with the first question, there is a calculation involved and we can describe the process. in the second question, it's "automatic" and we can't describe the process of how we got to that answer.
Term
Give an example (and explain the logic) of how accuracy (% correct) can be used to measure mental processes.
Definition
example: show random letters for split second and then write down what they are. show the letters unscrambled, it spells elephant. this demonstrates that prior knowledge affects perception. perception for a real word will be better than for string of letters. (ELEPHANTS VS. PNLAESHITE.)
Term
What is the basic idea behind (and the results) of the study looking at testing during lectures?
Definition
To show that testing during lecture helps improve attention and recall later. The study provides an example of how to use accuracy (% material recalled) to study mental processes.
Term
Define "bottom-up" and give an example.
Definition
Processing based on incoming sensory information (data driven). The body/sensory information responds first, then emotion, then thought/brain/beliefs. An example is the reading test (scrambled letters). bottom-up processes is simply just SEEING the letters.
Term
Define "top-down" processes and give an example.
Definition
Processing based on prior knowledge, expectations. The brain/thought/beliefs responds first, then emotion, then the body/sensory information. An example is the reading test (scrambled letters.) Top-down is recognizing a word with scrambled letters.
Term
Why is the distinction between bottom-up and top-down processes important?
Definition
the distinction is important because we are prone to think of our visual experience as based on the information coming in from the real world, and we don't think as much about how our knowledge and expectations shape those early perceptual processes.
Term
What are the 4 cortical areas (lobes) of the brain and what functions are they associated with?
Definition
Frontal-motor, Parietal-somatosensory, Temporal-auditory, and Occipital-visual.
Term
What does ERP measure and why is this valuable?
Definition
each electrode summarizes millions of neurons, each of which is always slightly active. the researcher then administers tens or hundreds of trials that are similar to one another, then averages all EEG waves from these trials. This is valuable because the technique could tell you very precisely at what time you start to see a difference in successful and unsuccessful recall.
Term
What do fMRI's measure and why is this valuable?
Definition
calculates the ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated blood in a local area in the brain to determine where the brain is damaged. this is valuable because it shows when the brain is more active, and where.
Term
what do PET's do and why is this valuable?
Definition
measures brain activity indirectly (similar to fMRI's). PET measures blood flow with small amounts of radioactive tracer that decays rapidly. The injected racer emits subatomic particles that collide with nearby electrons. all this is happening while the patient's head is in a large circle shaped device that determines where the gamma rays originated. more gamma rays mean more radioactive isotope, which means more blood, which means more neural activity.
Term
what is brain stimulation and why is it important?
Definition
Penfield stimulated different parts of the brain when he went in for brain surgery, and he was able to localize cognitive functions that way, showing where language, motor, etc. are controlled in the cortex.
Term
Give an example of how an fMRI has helped us understand cognition better.
Definition
fMRI is a brain imaging technique that evaluates activity in different parts of the brain by measuring blood flow (and specifically oxygen consumption). This technique can help clarify brain-behavior relationships by localizing some mental processes. For example, we can see whether one hemisphere is more active than another when performing arithmetic. Another example is that the right hemisphere may be more active than the left when a meaningless letter string is viewed, but the reverse occurs when a real word is viewed.
Term
What are "split-brain" patients?
Definition
When the corpus callosum connecting the two hemispheres of the brain is severed to some degree. (usually surgically cut).
Term
What have we learned from studying "split-brain" patients?
Definition
The hemispheres can be tested separately. We learned that a word/image to left hemisphere can be named or drawn with right hand, and word/image to right hemisphere can be drawn with left hand (but not named).
Language is lateralized in the left hemisphere, where facial recognition is lateralized in the right hemisphere.
Left hemisphere will see objects, right hemisphere faces.
Term
Define descriptive research, and give an example.
Definition
one simply describes some behavior as one finds it in the world. three commonly used methods are descriptive: naturalistic observation, case studies, and self-report. The U.S. census is an example of this.
Term
Define relational research, and give an example.
Definition
examines two or more aspects of the world with an eye to seeing whether they are related. An example would be measuring memory ability and age, then determine whether one is related to the other.
Term
Define experimental research, and give an example.
Definition
Measure whether two things are related, but change one factor and observe the effect of the change on the other. An example would be manipulating people's self esteem by administering a fake personality test and giving false feedback, telling half that they are charismatic and the other half they aren't, then administering some cognitive task for them to perform.
Term
Define independent variable.
Definition
the variable that the researcher manipulates.
Term
Define dependent variable.
Definition
the variable the researcher measures.
Term
Define ecological validity.
Definition
The extent to which an experiment represents "the real world". High ecological validity means that the conditions of the experiment seem similar to the ones that would be encountered in everyday life.
Term
Explain how visual information is processed, including what the visual receptors do, how information is sent to the brain, and what happens in the brain.
Definition
Signals from the environment are taken into the nervous system through receptors (rods and cones); connected to bipolar, ganglion cells at retina. Information is constantly coded and transformed as it moves through the visual system. In the brain, there are feature detectors in cortex: simple, complex, hyper-complex, and grandmother cells.
Term
Describe Rods.
Definition
120 million rods in each eye, found in peripheral, light sensitive, good for night vision and motion detection (not good for color).
Term
Describe Cones.
Definition
6 million cones in each eye, found in central (fovea), color sensitive, good for high acuity and color.
Term
What are the 4 types of feature detectors?
Definition
Simple, complex, hyper-complex, grandmother cells.
Term
Describe simple cells
Definition
line, edge detectors
Term
Describe complex cells
Definition
respond optimally to lines of specific orientation or moving in a specific direction.
Term
Describe hyper-complex cells
Definition
length and movement; angle and movement
Term
Describe Grandmother cells
Definition
specific stimulus, e.g. hand, face.
Term
What are the three types of indeterminacies?
Definition
shape and orientation; light source, reflectance, and shadow; size and distance.
Term
Define shape and orientation indeterminacy.
Definition
Refers to the fact that shape and orientation are indeterminate from a two-dimensional projection (e.g. a coin that looks like an ellipse if it is turned).
Term
Define light source, reflectance, and shadow indeterminacy.
Definition
Refers to the fact that the amount of light hitting the retina from an object depends on the light source, the reflectance of the object, and whether the object is in shadow (e.g. a piece of coal in a bright situation could be brighter than a white object in a dark room).
Term
Define size and distance indeterminacy.
Definition
Refers to the fact that the size of an object on the retina is determined by the actual size of the object and by the distance of the object from the observer (e.g. is the object far and big or close and small).
Term
How are ambiguities resolved with respect to shape?
Definition
shape and orientation are resolved by assuming that objects are not in unusual orientations. shape perception is also influenced by the frame of reference in which the object is viewed.
Term
How are ambiguities resolved with respect to brightness?
Definition
light source, reflectance, and shadow are resolved by making assumptions about the color of objects and typical ambient lighting.
Term
How are ambiguities resolved with respect to size?
Definition
size and distance are usually resolved by using cues to distance in the environment (e.g., an object that partially covers another must be closer to the observer).
Term
What are the pictorial cues used in distant perception?
Definition
cues to distance that can be used in two-dimensional pictures, like occlusion, texture gradient, linear perspective, relative height, and atmospheric perspective.
Term
define occlusion
Definition
a pictorial cue used in distant perception; an object that is in front of another will partly overlap it.
Term
define texture gradient
Definition
a pictorial cue used in distant perception; a field is assumed to have a uniform texture gradient, so if more detail is visible in part of the field, it is assumed to be closer.
Term
define linear perspective
Definition
a pictorial cue used in distant perception; parallel lines converge in the distance, so the closer they are to converging, the farther away the location.
Term
define relative height
Definition
a pictorial cue used in distant perception; objects that are higher in the picture plane are farther away.
Term
define atmospheric perspective
Definition
a pictorial cue used in distant perception; objects in the distance look less distinct because they are viewed through more dust and water particles in the air that scatter light.
Term
what is the difference between viewer-centered and object-centered representations?
Definition
viewer centered is a mental representation of what an object looks like relative to the observer, where object centered is a mental representation of what an object looks like relative to the object itself. the representation can support recognition of the object when it is viewed from any perspective.
Term
What is the important elements of the Template Model?
Definition
it is a bottom up model. the whole form must be stored; exact match required. what we have stored in our memory is a specific representation.
Term
what is evidence to support the template model?
Definition
good for machine reading because the symbols/etc. don't change and the machine has every pattern possible memorized.
Term
what are the limitations of the template model?
Definition
not effective way to recognize patterns. you'd have to have a template for all forms of an object. it's not flexible!
Term
what are the important elements of the feature analysis model?
Definition
bottom-up model. the list of parts of particular things are stored instead of whole forms; visual stimulus is broken down into basic parts. (letter T= vertical line and horizontal line). more economical in memory. Hierarchical: taking simple features and build to more complex shape.
Term
what is evidence to support the feature analysis model?
Definition
letters made up of vertical, horizontal lines.
Term
what are the limitations of the feature analysis model?
Definition
it doesn't take into acount context effects, in which it's easier to identify a letter in a word than by itself. would probably predict a letter would be indentified more slowly/less accurately when presented in a word, because feature of other letters might interfere.
Term
what are the important elements of the analysis by synthesis model?
Definition
it is top down PLUS bottom-up model. context, prior knowledge, expectations affect perception. generate hypothesis about what you think you're seeing, sample data to confirm, if doesn't confirm generate new hypothesis and resample.
Term
what is evidence to support the analysis by synthesis model?
Definition
context effects -- word superiority, warren phoneme restoration, visual and auditory sentence context effects.
Term
what are the important elements of the Biederman's Recognition by Components model?
Definition
came up with the idea that objects can be broken down into more basic components, called geons. edges are important, they remain invariant in relation to one another. mental representations (in memory) made up of geons.
Term
what are limitations of the biederman's recognition by components model?
Definition
the model is all bottom-up, evidence of context effects that are not accounted for, overall shape of an object can be perceived as quickly as components. some evidence for template-like representations (multiple-view theory)
Term
what is the evidence that supports the biederman's recognition by components model?
Definition
basic for computer models, data supporting importance of junctions, object-centered; can recognize from different angles.
Term
define agnosia.
Definition
patients typically suffer damage to the border of the temporal and occipital lobes, and have difficulty recognizing objects sing vision but can do so using other senses.
Term
what is apperceptive agnosia?
Definition
impaired but OK vision, intact cognitive function, can identify objects from touch/sound, unable to copy letters/simple figures, unable to describe the outlines of simple objects.
Term
what is associate agnosia?
Definition
(object agnosia): perceptual processes good, good ability to copy "percept stripped of meaning", disconnection between perception and meaning stored in memory.
Term
what is prosopagnosia?
Definition
face recognition deficit: dissociated from object agnosia: can have one and not the other, similar to object agnosia in other abilities, specialized cells that respond to faces, usually bilateral occipital-temporal lesions, but special role of right hemisphere.
Term
what is synesthesia?
Definition
blending of senses: a stimulus from one sensory system produces an experience in another sensory modality.
Term
what are some examples of synesthesia?
Definition
notes of music stimulate experience of color, black numbers seen in color, tactile experience produces tastes.
Term
what are characteristics of an automatic process?
Definition
unintentional; cannot be prevented (stroop test). requires no limited capacity resources, allows us to do several things at once. is unconscious and rapid.
Term
what is an example of an automatic process?
Definition
walking, skiing, driving.
Term
what are characteristics of an attentional process?
Definition
occurs with intention, requires mental resources, effort. is conscious, open to awareness, is relatively slow.
Term
what is an example of an attentional process?
Definition
picking your nose.
Term
What is the Stroop task and why is it important?
Definition
there is word reading, ink color naming, then ink color naming of color words (interference condition). this is important because it gives insight to the internal retrieval processes through the reaction time and accuracy of the word name/ink color.
Term
Define selective attention and why is it important?
Definition
the ability to focus on one task and ignore distractions. this is important because it can improve performance, uses concentration and effort, and the ability to focus on some information and ignore others is a very helpful trait to have.
Term
what are the characteristics of the early selection model?
Definition
only information you're paying attention to is processed for meaning, not anything else. everything else is "blocked". also called the filter model.
Term
what are the limitations of the early selection model?
Definition
people tend to hear own name, even if it's in the unattended channel. if the stories switch ears, shadowing tends to follow content of story.
Term
what are characteristics of the attenuation model?
Definition
selection is based on physical features, only the selected information becomes conscious, but instead of the unselected info being blocked, it's just "weakened".
Term
what are the limitations of the attenuation model?
Definition
like the early selection model, highly meaningful information may be processed even if it's in the "weakened" channel.
Term
what are characteristics of the late selection model?
Definition
all info is processed for meaning, but only some information is selected for consciousness. this is based on the task you have to do.
Term
what are the limitations of the late selection model?
Definition
even if you're not aware of it, you're still processing all the information which can use a lot more effort than the other models (but not as much as the multi-mode model).
Term
what are characteristics of the multi-mode model?
Definition
the selection process/filter can be moved around depending on what you need to do. you can have a filter on early processing, do memory analysis of all information coming in then choosing what you want.
Term
what are the limitations of the multi-mode model?
Definition
difficult if trying to process everything then selecting what you want. requires a lot more effort and attentional resources.
Term
describe the dual task and explain why it's used to study attention.
Definition
Doing two things at once. it's used to study attention because it measures if there is interference in performance.
Term
describe dichotic listening and explain why it's used to study attention.
Definition
where you can select and repeat one message while each earpiece is playing a different message. it's used to study attention by studying how much the unattended material is processed.
Term
describe the shadowing tasks and why it's used to study attention.
Definition
in a dichotic listening task, you listen to material on headphones and each earpiece plays a different message. you are to attend to just one message and repeating the attended message outloud as you hear it. it's used to see if you can use dual tasking with different senses (talking while listening)
Term
define divided attention
Definition
the ability to split one's attention between more than one task.
Term
define vigilance
Definition
the ability to maintain attention to a task in which stimuli appear infrequently.
Term
what is the difference between a simple feature search and conjunction search with respect to Treisman's feature integration theory?
Definition
in the simple feature, or disjunctive, the target differs from the distractors on just one feature, as in the two top arrays. in a conjunctive, more than one feature differentiates the target from the distractors. (from the "find the letter" task.)
Term
how does the difference between a simple feature search and conjunction search support treisman's idea that attention serves as the "glue" that hold features together?
Definition
basic features (color, line orientation, location) cause a simple search, while conjunctions of features (color and shape) require attention.
Term
what is the difference between serial and parallel processing?
Definition
serial is item-by-item searching, while parallel is scanning whole scene and find what you're looking for; don't need attention.
Term
how can you prove attention is object-based, not location based?
Definition
attention is NEEDED to join features together into objects, if there is no attention, conjunction errors may occur.
Term
why do cell phone conversations affect driving performance?
Definition
Being in a dual-task affects visual processing.
Term
what evidence do they provide for inattention blindness in distracted driving?
Definition
They showed a surprise memory test at the end and asked the participant what objects were not shown during their drive while on the phone. the results showed that many of the participants could not correctly identify the wrong visual.
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