elaborated
Cognition - ANSWERSall the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing,
remembering, and communicating
How is Cognitive Psychology different from other theories? - ANSWERS• It accepts the
use of the scientific method, and generally rejects introspection as a valid method of
investigation - in contrast with such approaches as Freudian psychology.
• It explicitly acknowledges the existence of internal mental states (such as belief,
desire, idea, knowledge and motivation).
Coined the term "Cognitive Psychology" - ANSWERSUlric Neisser
Cognitive Psychology - ANSWERSBranch of psychology concerned with how people
acquire, store, transform, use and communicate
information
Rationalism - ANSWERSbelief in reason and logic as the primary source of knowledge
(logic & theory)
Empiricism - ANSWERSthe view that (a) knowledge comes from experience via the
senses, and (b) science flourishes through observation and experiment.
Structuralism - ANSWERSearly school of psychology that used introspection to explore
elemental structure of human mind led by - Wundt
Functionalism - ANSWERSa school of psychology that focused on how mental and
behavioral processes function - how they enable the organism to adapt, survive, and
flourish; assumes all mental and behavioral processes have a purpose.
Pragmatism - ANSWERSa philosophical principle, first expressed by William James,
that expressed the evolutionary idea that truth arose from the testing of new ideas, the
value of which lay in their practical consequences. Ideas gain validity from their social
consequences and practical applications. It reflected the American quality- the
inventive, experimental spirit that judged ideas on their results and their ability to adapt
to changing social needs and environments
, Associationism - ANSWERSIn psychophysics and cognition the theoretical approach
that complex ideas are the result of associations between simple elements. In learning
theories synonymous with the S-R connection (stimulus with response).
Behaviorism - ANSWERSthe view that psychology (1) should be an objective science
that (2) studies behavior without reference to mental processes. Most research
psychologists today agree with (1) but not with (2). (Contiguity, Similarity, Contrast)
Gestalt Psychology - ANSWERSa psychological approach that emphasizes that we
often perceive the whole rather than the sum of the parts
Cognitive Revolution - ANSWERSthe shift away from strict behaviorism, begun in the
1950s, characterized by renewed interest in fundamental problems of consciousness
and internal mental processes - response to behaviorism.
Cognitive Revolution let us examine more important things, namely: - ANSWERS1)
Language
2) AI
3) Practical Applications
4) Psychobiology
Information Processing Approach - ANSWERSapproach to the study of cognitive
development by observing and analyzing the mental processes involved in perceiving
and handling information
Connectionist Approach - ANSWERSAn influential model in cognitive psychology that
proposes that the activation of one cue leads to the activation of other related concepts.
Also known as parallel distributed processing approach or PDP approach.
Input to hidden to ouput
Learned by getting stimulus, gets feedback,feedback transforms to error signal the
network is change to correct response.
Ex. Is language acquisition
Evolutionary Approach - ANSWERSa psychological perspective that uses evolutionary
ideas such as adaptation, reproduction, and "survival of the fittest" as the basis for
explaining specific human behaviors
Ecological Approach - ANSWERSan approach to the study of cognition emphasizing
the natural contexts or settings in which cognitive activities occur, and the influence
such settings have in the ways in which cognitive activities are acquired, practiced, and
executed.
Rationalism vs. empiricism - ANSWERSR; asserts that some fundamental knowledege
is a priori. (indepenent of sensation and perception) E: all knowledge is a posteriori
(dependent upon sensation)