correctly answered
What is Cognitive Psychology? - ANSWERSCognitive psychology is how people
acquire, remember, comprehend, and use info (perception to action)
Be able to articulate why the history of Cognitive Psychology is important to know -
ANSWERSTo know what works and what doesn't... to avoid making the same mistakes
What are the two (key) framing ideas for thinking about the history of Cognitive
Psychology? - ANSWERSMental representation: state/concept that corresponds to a
thing perceived, objects that have semantics (ex: thoughts, concepts, ideas,
impressions, notions)
Mental computation: activity or processing, a calculation
What were the different historical movements that led to the development of Cognitive
Psychology? o What did they have in common? What differentiates them? o Know a
general timeline of when they occurred (i.e., a progression - not specific dates) -
ANSWERS1. Associationism: mind represents the world as a network of ideas (ideas
arise through experience); senses (traces of the world) and reflection (on the minds own
activity); associations formed through contiguity (things happening in a close session),
similarity (resemblance between 2 things), and repetition (repeating same ideas again
and again leads to association)
2. Structuralism: analyzed in detail conscious experience and analyze their contents
(introspection); break down mind into most basic elements---> conscious experience
broken down into basic conscious elements;cannot research thought because it is too
complex; consciousness (sensations, images, feelings)
3. Functionalism: mind is an organ that adapts to its environment; recognition of a
problem, isolation of the relevant features, formulation of alternative solutions, testing
the solution---->how behavior helps/hurts us
4. Behaviorism: focused on human behavior; no point to study inaccessible events of
the mind; instead must focus on stimulus-response
Know the key scientists associated with the following movements: Introspectionism and
Behaviorism - ANSWERSIntrospectionism: Wilhelm Wundt
, Behaviorism: John B. Watson and B.F. Skinner
Be able to articulate the advantages and disadvantages of different approaches. o E.g.,
what did behaviorists criticize about introspectionism? -- Why was behaviorism
successful (albeit for a limited time)? What were the critiques of behaviorism? -
ANSWERSIntrospectionism advantages: many people can use, people can repeat
procedure, no fancy equipment, access to thinking
Introspectionism disadvantages: results do not replicate (reliability), subjective
(interpretation), different people may interpret the same experience differently
Behaviorism worked well for simple learning scenarios but could not explain thinking
(what was happening in the head) using S-R theory (ex: language has rules of abstract
thought)
Know concepts like: Classical and Operant Conditioning o Be able to differentiate
between these different types of learning. - ANSWERSClassical conditioning: US-->UR
to NS---> US becomes CS---->CR
(ex: presenting meat (US)=salivation(UR) ring bell (NS) then present meat
(US)=salivation(UR) then ring bell (CS)=salivation(CR))
Operant conditioning: reinforcement or punishment (feedback); change probability of
response
(ex: press bar=food --> press bar=reinforced)
Know the differences between Cognitive Psychology and Behaviorist approaches to
understanding human behavior. - ANSWERSCognitive psychology studies the
components of thinking, from perception to action (figure out what steps in the head
produce behavior)
Behaviorist: focus on behaviors, explanation in terms of which stimuli which responses-
associations S--->R
What is the role of theory? - ANSWERSRole: organize current results-provide
coherence, explanation; predict new results-guide research
Know the differences between observations and experiments. - ANSWERSObservation:
don't interfere, just watch
Experiment: manipulate variable
• How should we design experiments to test an issue? o You may be asked to
determine the best approach to test a hypothesis - requires logical reasoning about
alternatives. Must know the difference between independent and dependent variables. -
ANSWERSExperiments should have random assignment of subject to conditions