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Chapter 8.  19th Century focus on the mind  Introspection  Behaviorist focus on overt responses  arguments regarding incomplete picture of human functioning.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 8.  19th Century focus on the mind  Introspection  Behaviorist focus on overt responses  arguments regarding incomplete picture of human functioning."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 8

2  19th Century focus on the mind  Introspection  Behaviorist focus on overt responses  arguments regarding incomplete picture of human functioning  Empirical study of cognition – 1956 conference  Simon and Newell – problem solving  Chomsky – new model of language  Miller – memory

3  Properties of Language  Symbolic  Semantic  Generative  Structured

4  Phonemes = smallest speech units  100 possible, English – about 40  Morphemes = smallest unit of meaning  50,000 in English, root words, prefixes, suffixes  Semantics = meaning of words and word combinations  Objects and actions to which words refer  Syntax = a system of rules for arranging words into sentences  Different rules for different languages

5  Initial vocalizations similar across languages  Crying, cooing, babbling  6 months – babbling sounds begin to resemble surrounding language  1 year – first word  similar cross-culturally – words for parents  receptive vs. expressive language

6 Table 8.2 Overview of Typical Language Development

7  18-24 months – vocabulary spurt  fast mapping  over and underextensions  End of second year – combine words  Telegraphic speech  Mean Length of Utterance (MLU)  End of third year – complex ideas, plural, past tense  Overregularization

8  Research findings:  Smaller vocabularies in one language, combined vocabularies average  Higher scores for middle-class bilingual subjects on cognitive flexibility, analytical reasoning, selective attention, and metalinguistic awareness  Slight disadvantage in terms of language processing speed  2nd languages more easily acquired early in life  Greater acculturation facilitates acquisition

9 Figure 8.4 Age and second language learning

10  Dolphins, sea lions, parrots, chimpanzees  Vocal apparatus issue  American Sign Language  Allen and Beatrice Gardner (1969)  Chimpanzee - Washoe  160 word vocabulary  Sue Savage-Rumbaugh  Bonobo chimpanzee - Kanzi  Symbols  Receptive language – 72% of 660 requests

11  Behaviorist  Skinner ▪ learning of specific verbal responses  Nativist  Chomsky ▪ learning the rules of language ▪ Language Acquisition Device (LAD)  Interactionist  Cognitive, social communication, and emergentist theories

12 Figure 8.5 Interactionist theories of language acquisition

13  Greeno (1978) – three basic classes  Problems of inducing structure  Series completion and analogy problems  Problems of arrangement  String problem and Anagrams ▪ Often solved through insight  Problems of transformation  Hobbits and orcs problem  Water jar problem

14 Figure 8.6 Six standard problems used in studies of problem solving

15  Well defined vs. ill defined problems  Barriers to effective problem solving:  Irrelevant Information  Functional Fixedness  Mental Set  Unnecessary Constraints

16 Figure 8.12 The tower of Hanoi problem

17  Algorithms  Systematic trial-and-error  Guaranteed solution  Heuristics  Shortcuts  No guaranteed solution ▪ Forming subgoals ▪ Working backward ▪ Searching for analogies ▪ Changing the representation of a problem

18 Figure 8.16 Representing the bird and train problem

19  Field dependence – relying on external frames of reference  Field independence – relying on internal frames of reference  Western cultures inspire field independence  Cultural influence based in ecological demands  Holistic vs. analytic cognitive styles

20  Simon (1957) – theory of bounded rationality  Making Choices  Additive strategies  Elimination by aspects  Risky decision making ▪ Expected value ▪ Subjective utility ▪ Subjective probability

21 Table 8.3 Application of the additive model to choosing an apartment

22  The availability heuristic  The representativeness heuristic  The tendency to ignore base rates  The conjunction fallacy  The alternative outcomes effect

23 Figure 8.18 The conjunction fallacy

24  The gambler’s fallacy  Overestimating the improbable  Confirmation bias and belief perseverance  The overconfidence effect  Framing

25  Cosmides and Tooby (1996)  Unrealistic standard of rationality  Decision making evolved to handle real-world adaptive problems  Problem solving research based on contrived, artificial problems  Gigerenzer (2000)  Quick and dirty heuristics  Less than perfect but adaptive


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