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Cognitive Processes Chapter 8
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Studying CognitionLanguage UseVisual CognitionProblem Solving and ReasoningJudgment and Decision MakingRecapping Main Points Chapter 8 Preview
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Concept of Cognition Cognition Processes of knowing, including attending, remembering, and reasoning Content of processes (e.g. concepts and memories)
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Concept of Cognition Cognitive Psychology Study of higher mental processes such as attention, language use, memory, perception, problem-solving, and thinking
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Domain of Cognitive Psychology
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Concept of Cognition Cognitive Science Interdisciplinary field of study of systems and processes that manipulate information
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Domain of Cognitive Science
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Studying Cognition F.C. Donders Reaction time experiments Discovering Process of Mind
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Mental Processes and Mental Resources Carried out in order, one after other Serial Processes Carried out simultaneously Parallel Processes
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Breaking down High- Level Cognitive Activities
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Mental Processes Responsible for distributing limited processing resources over different tasks Attentional Processes
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Mental Processes Require attention Controlled Processes Do not require attention Automatic Processes
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Language Use Language Production What people say, sign, and write and processes they go through to produce message Speakers versus listeners
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Language Use Audience Design Shaping message depending on audience H. Paul Grice Cooperative principle Speakers produce utterances appropriate to setting and meaning of ongoing conversation
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Language Use Audience Design Herbert Clark Common Ground Community membership Linguistic co-presence Physical co-presence
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Speech Execution and Speech Errors ProcessesRepresentations
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Speech Execution and Speech Errors Spoonerism “You have tasted the whole worm!” “Tips of the slung”
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Language Understanding
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Brain Bases of Ambiguity Resolution
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Products of Understanding Inferences Missing information filled in on basis of sample of evidence or on basis of prior beliefs and theories Number of potential inferences after utterance is unlimited
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Language and Evolution
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Critical Thinking in Your Life Why and how do people lie? How might people’s motives for lying affect the validity of research on lying? What does the study on page 219 of your text suggest about ethical constraints for studying lying in a laboratory setting?
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Language, Thought, and Culture Does language affect thought? Linguistic Relativity Edward Sapir and Benjamin Whorf Structure of language impacts way in which individual thinks about world
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Visual Cognition Ability to engage in efficient mental rotation depends partially on visual experiences Visual images answer certain questions about world Visual images can be based on verbal imagery
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Rotated R Used to Assess Mental Imagery
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Problem Solving and Reasoning Problem Solving Thinking directed toward solving specific problems Moves from initial state to a goal by mental operations
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Problem Solving Problem Space Well-defined Problem Ill-defined Problem Elements that make up a problem
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Problem Solving Algorithm Heuristic Step-by-step procedure Always provides right answer Cognitive strategies (“rules of thumb”) Shortcuts to solving complex inferential tasks
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Problem Solving Think- aloud Protocols Verbalizing ongoing thoughts while working on task
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Problem Solving Functional Fixedness Inability to perceive new use for object previously associated with some other purpose
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Problem Solving Creativity Ability to generate ideas or products that are both novel and appropriate to the circumstances
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Problem Solving Creativity Divergent thinking Convergent thinking Insight
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Making Judgments about Creativity
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Reasoning Process of thinking in which conclusions are drawn from a set of facts Directed toward given goal
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Deductive Reasoning Drawing conclusions by logically following two or more statements Belief-bias Effect Prior knowledge, attitudes, or values distort reasoning
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Inductive Reasoning Conclusion made about probability based on available evidence and past experience Analogical Problem Solving Mental Set
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Judging and Deciding Decision Making Choosing between alternatives Judgment Forming opinions, reaching conclusions, and making critical evaluations
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Heuristic and Judgment Availability Heuristic Judgment based on information readily available in memory Representative Heuristic Assigns object to category on basis of few characteristics Anchoring heuristic People show insufficient adjustment up or down from original starting value when judging probable value of outcome
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Psychology of Decision Making Framing Decisions Consequences of Decision Making Decision Aversion
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Recapping Chapter 8 Main Points Discovering the Processes of the Mind Mental Process and Mental Resources Studying Cognition Production Understanding Language Evolution Language Thought and Culture Language Use
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Recapping Chapter 8 Main Points Using Visual Representation Combining Verbal and Visual Representations Visual Cognition Problem Solving Deductive Reasoning Inductive Reasoning Problem Solving and Reasoning
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Recapping Chapter 8 Main Points Heuristics and Judgment Psychology of Decision Making Judgment and Decision Making
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