Contemporary Issues - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Contemporary Issues

Description:

Students should be able to...explain one contemporary issue or debate using ... PPs shown fake advert of Bugs Bunny at Disneyland ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: Sax2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Contemporary Issues


1
Contemporary Issues
  • The Cognitive Approach

Aidan Sammons
www.psychlotron.org.uk
2
Contemporary Issues
  • Students should be able toexplain one
    contemporary issue or debate using terminology or
    ideas drawn from the cognitive approach.
  • Edexcel AS Psychology Specification
  • Identify key concepts from the approach
  • Be able to explain them
  • Be able to apply them to real world situations or
    problems

3
Cognitive Concepts
  • Information processing
  • Schema driven processing
  • Reconstructive memory
  • False memory syndrome

4
Information Processing
Output
5
Input Processes
Computer
Mind
  • Keyboard
  • Mouse
  • Scanner
  • Camera
  • Microphone
  • Vision
  • Hearing
  • Touch
  • Smell
  • Taste

6
Output Processes
Computer
Mind
  • Screen
  • Projector
  • Printer
  • Loudspeaker
  • Behaviour
  • Speech

7
Human Information Processing
Behaviour
8
Cognitive Processes
Perception interpreting incoming sensory
information
Attention selecting information for further
processing
Thinking sorting, combining, modifying
information
9
The Importance of Memory
  • Not just a store for information
  • Influences what is selected
  • How it is interpreted
  • Actively involved in all aspects of cognition

10
Limits of the Computer Metaphor
Computer
Mind
  • Processes information passively
  • Nonsense in, nonsense out
  • Processes information actively
  • Tries to make sense of information
  • Nonsense in, sense out

11
Computer Information Processing
BANG!
Can you wreck a nice beach?
12
Human Information Processing
Yes. I can recognise speech.
13
Schema Driven Processing
  • Knowledge is organised into schemas
  • Schemas allow us to make sense of information
  • Making sense of information can distort it

14
Schema Driven Processing
Bartlett (1932)
15
Reconstructive Memories
  • Schemas are used to reconstruct memories
  • We attempt to recall things so they make as much
    sense as possible
  • Biases, errors and alterations in schemas can
    result in distortions of memory

16
Reconstructive Errors
  • Loftus conducted research in which people were
    deliberately misinformed about what they had seen
  • She showed that it was possible to alter peoples
    memories

17
Key Cognitive Ideas
  • The mind is compared to a computer, with inputs,
    processes and outputs
  • Unlike a computer, the mind is both active and
    selective in the way it processes information
  • Schemas are used to interpret experiences and
    reconstruct memories
  • Alterations and biases in schemas can affect the
    accuracy of memory

18
Alien Abduction
  • The Truth Is In There

19
Alien Abduction Experiences
  • Abduction occurs at night
  • Abductee is conscious but immobilised
  • Aliens carry out medical investigation
  • Elements of sexual molestation

20
Three Possibilities
  • Abductees have really been kidnapped by aliens.
  • Abductees are lying.
  • Abductees believe themselves to have been
    kidnapped by aliens when they actually havent.

21
Occams Razor
When two competing theories purport to explain
the same phenomenon, in the absence of evidence,
prefer the simpler one
22
McNally (2003)
  • Tested abductees physiological responses to
    hearing about trauma.
  • Increased heart rate, sweating etc.
  • Same responses as combat veterans, car crash
    survivors victims of violent crime.
  • Abductees are genuinely traumatised.

23
Abductee Stories
  • Abductees have probably not been kidnapped by
    aliens
  • They do not appear to be lying
  • Therefore, it is possible that they have
    constructed false memories of alien abduction

24
Creating False Memories
  • Requires a person to believe that something
    happened, when it did not.
  • This understanding becomes part of that persons
    schematic understanding.
  • As a result, they may spontaneously recall a
    memory that is actually false.

25
Roediger McDermott (1995)
  • EXAM
  • QUIZ
  • GRADE
  • STUDY
  • SCHOOL
  • QUESTION
  • SCORE
  • PASS
  • FAIL
  • Participants studied the wordlist on the right
  • They were later asked to recall the words
  • Many recalled that the word TEST was on the list

26
Loftus Pickrell (1995)
  • PPs relatives interviewed to help construct a
    plausible story about getting lost on a shopping
    trip
  • PPs interviewed (twice) and asked to recall
    additional information about the event

27
Loftus Pickrell (1995)
  • With repeated discussion, the memory was
    accepted as true by some of the PPs
  • 7 out of 24 accepted the memory and were able to
    recall additional information

28
Loftus Pickrell (1995)
  • These results show that people will create false
    recalls of childhood experiences in response to
    misleading information and the social demands
    inherent in repeated interviews.
  • (Loftus and Pickrell, 1995)
  • Some PPs accepted that the account was plausible
  • The input of relatives made it more believable
  • Once it was accepted as real, a memory was
    constructed out of schemas

29
Loftus (2001 2003)
  • Questioned Russian witnesses to terrorist
    bombings in 1999
  • Suggested they had seen a wounded animal
  • 6 months later, 12.5 recalled considerable
    detail about the animal

30
Loftus (2001)
  • PPs shown fake advert of Bugs Bunny at Disneyland
  • Asked if they remembered meeting Bugs on
    childhood visits to Disneyland
  • 35 reported doing so
  • Impossible, because Bugs Bunny is a Warner Bros
    character

31
Characteristics of Abductees
  • Pre-existing New Age beliefs (astral
    projection, tarot cards etc.)
  • Score highly on measures of fantasy/absorption
  • Episodes of sleep paralysis

McNally (2003)
32
Sleep Paralysis
  • Occurs on waking from REM sleep
  • Body remains paralysed after waking
  • 30 of population experience it at some time
  • 5 of people also experience hypnopopic
    hallucinations
  • They continue dreaming, despite being awake

33
Alien Abduction Memories
Construction of alien abduction memory
McNally (2003)
34
Alien Abduction Memories
  • The person experiences sleep paralysis
  • They also experience hypnopopic hallucinations
  • They are motivated to make sense of a frightening
    experience
  • To do so, they draw on schematic ideas of alien
    abductions

35
Alien Abduction Memories
Or are they?
  • Contact with other abductees reinforces their
    belief in the experience and encourages the
    development of detail in the memory
  • In some cases, therapists facilitate this
    process.
  • The resulting memory is real enough to cause
    trauma, even though it does not correspond to
    real events.
  • Alien abduction experiences are an example of
    false memory syndrome
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com