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Learning and Transfer - Cognitive Psychology

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Cognitive Psychology (C82NAB) lecture notes - Learning and Transfer.

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December 17, 2013
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Written in
2009/2010
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LEARNING AND TRANSFER
Transfer refers to the use of previous knowledge in new situations
- Learn to drive a mini then transfer to a Jaguar
- Learn to play a clarinet then transfer to a saxophone

Positive transfer = the appropriate application of prior knowledge
- Solving a new problem faster and more easily

Negative transfer = the inappropriate application of prior knowledge
- Prior knowledge slows down or disrupts your performance on a new task.
- Functional fixedness
- But hard to tell the difference between partial positive transfer and negative transfer

Near Transfer = (positive) transfer of knowledge to situations which closely relate to the earlier situation

Far Transfer = (positive) transfer of knowledge to situations which less closely resemble the earlier situation.

Gick & Holyoak (1980)
- Study with tumor – radiation will kill tumor, but rays strong enough to kill tumor will also kill healthy
tissue
- Hint – army general needs to attack a fortress, with many roads leading to it, all the roads have land
minds that are triggered by heavy traffic – if whole army travels down a road the land mines will go
off.
- Much more participants solved the cancer story when given the army analogy.


 What if there was a greater semantic connection between new and prior knowledge?
- YES (Keane, 1987) - 88% of students give a semantically close story spontaneously.
 What if the principle of base problem is stated?
- NO (Gick & Holyoak 1983) – only 33% of subjects found the solution when given the principle and
story compared to 29% with the story alone.
 What if multiple problems with related solutions are shown?
- YES (Gick & Holyoak 1983) – performance is improved to 53% if given two dissimilar stories.
 What if diagrams are shown?
- NO (Gick & Holyoak 1983) – found only 7% of participants found the solution if shown a diagram and
23% if given a diagram and story.

IMPORTANCE OF SIMILARITIES

 Three main types of similarities:
- Superficial similarity refers to a solution-irrelevant but salient details- objects or characters
- Structural similarity – causal relations among the key components
- Procedural similarity – do procedural details match or differ from a target solution

Why do people perform badly in a lab?

- Chen (2002) – a boy needs to weigh an elephant but only has scales weighing up to 200kilos.
- 46% get it right with similar procedure compared to 28% for similar strategy
- People perform badly because artificial nature of experiment
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I have a First Class degree in psychology from the University of Nottingham. I have kept all my handwritten notes and revision cards, as well as the typed revision notes and lecture summaries I made during my course. These notes are clear, concise and informative. Most of the notes also include extra reading which will help you get those extra few marks in an exam or coursework. Please get in contact if there is anything in particular you are after.

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