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Cognitive Psychology

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Almost all research in Cognitive Science is relevant to some Cognitive Psychologist. ... Coren, S. & Ward, L. M. (1989). Sensation and Perception, Third Edition. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cognitive Psychology


1
Cognitive Psychology
  • Part I
  • Where does Cognitive Psychology fit within
    Cognitive Science?

2
Just about everywhere.
  • Almost all research in Cognitive Science is
    relevant to some Cognitive Psychologist.

3
Important Concepts
  • Three levels of organization of intelligent
    systems (Pylyshyn, 1999)
  • Physical/Biological
  • Syntactic/Symbolic
  • Semantic/Knowledge

4
  • Three levels of understanding information
    processing (Marr, 1982)
  • Hardware Implementation
  • Representational Algorithm
  • Computational Theory

5
Computational Theory(knowledge/semantics)
  • What is the goal of the computation?

See a brown dog
Pet the brown dog
6
Representation Algorithm(Syntactic/Symbolic)
  • How to implement these goals?
  • How are the inputs and outputs represented?
  • What must be done to see a brown dog?
  • To pet the brown dog?
  • What is the algorithm for transforming one to the
    other?

7
Hardware Implementation(biological/physical)
  • What physical equipment is needed to implement
    these representations and algorithms?
  • Retina(s)
  • Interneurons
  • Motoneurons
  • Muscles
  • Arm/hand
  • Proprioceptors
  • Tactile sensory neurons
  • Etc.

8
  • The three levels (theory, representation
    algorithm, and implementation) are useful
    organizing principles in all of Cognitive Science
  • Psychology is mostly concerned with the second
    level Representation and Processing

9
Whats not Cognitive Psychology?
  • Purely engineering solutions (e.g. Deep Blue
    II)
  • Building jet airplanes doesnt help us better
    understand birds

10
Reading AssignmentWeek 2
  • Pylyshyn, Z. (1999). Whats in your mind? In
    Lepore, E. Pylyshyn, Z. (Eds.) What is
    Cognitive Science (pp. 1-25). Oxford, Blackwell.

11
Warning
  • Pylyshyn is very biased
  • (but not necessarily wrong).
  • Opposed to behaviorism (1.11.2, 4.1).
  • Opposed to connectionism (In favor of symbolic
    representations) (4.2).

12
Behaviorism
  • We can only understand an organisms behavior by
    studying physical stimuli and how the organism
    reacts to them.
  • It is not possible to observe the internal
    workings of the mind, so dont propose internal
    constructs (goals/desires, mental
    representations, algorithms, etc.)
  • Now largely abandoned. In Cognitive Psychology
    it is now common and accepted to postulate
    internal constructs.

13
Connectionism
  • Computational models of behavior.
  • Modeled on the brain (neural networks).
  • Do not rely on symbolic expressions.
  • Can perform a surprising range of
    computational/behavioral tasks.
  • Cant do everything humans can?
  • (Fodor Pylyshyn, 1988)

14
Part II
  • What is Cognitive Psychology?

15
Cognitive Psychology
  • How
  • Experimental
  • Biological
  • Computational
  • What
  • Perception
  • Categorization
  • Representation
  • Memory
  • Attention
  • Learning
  • Thought

16
Why do experiments?
  • Human beings were not created for the
    convenience of experimental psychologists.
    George Miller (in Barsalou, 1992)

17
Control the situation
  • Most phenomena could have many causes, how do we
    know which one is the (main) cause?
  • Test each possibility, one by one.
  • Need to eliminate chance of other causes taking
    effect (control)

18
Some ways to control variables
  • Select your subjects carefully
  • Only right-handed, male, native English speakers
  • Create your stimuli carefully
  • Record specific syllables spoken by a trained
    talker
  • Choose a simple environment
  • Empty room, sound booth, etc.

19
Manipulate your subjects
  • Experiments crucially involve a comparison of (at
    least) two groups (who may still be the same
    people).
  • The difference between the groups is caused by
    manipulation of experimental variables.

20
Some Experimental Manipulations
  • Between group comparisons
  • 2 year-old children vs. 6 yr olds
  • English speakers vs. Cantonese speakers
  • University students vs. early school leavers
  • Within group comparisons
  • Untrained listeners vs. trained listeners
  • Listening to Cantonese vs. listening to English
  • Dosed with a drug vs. with a placebo

21
For example
  • Question Does knowing how to speak one tone
    language make it easier to hear the tones of a
    different tone language?
  • (easier than it is without knowing a tone
    language)
  • Possible answers
  • Yes, perception of tone is universal if youve
    got it, youve got it.
  • No, perception of tone is language-specific. You
    must learn the sound system of each language
    separately.
  • How do we test this?

22
Lee, Vakoch, Wurm (1996)
  • Three groups Cantonese, Mandarin, and English
    speakers
  • Two sets of sounds Cantonese and Mandarin
    (presented in pairs, grouped by language)
  • Asked subjects same or different for each pair

23
Lee, Vakoch, Wurm (1996)
  • Cantonese tones
  • Cantonese gt Mandarin English
  • Mandarin tones
  • Mandarin gt Cantonese gt English
  • Conclusions
  • Native language is best
  • knowing Cantonese helps with Mandarin
  • Knowing Mandarin does not help with Cantonese

24
Criticism of experiments
  • Ecologically implausible
  • same-different task is unlike real speech
    perception
  • Small answers to small problems
  • What do we really know now that we didnt know
    before?

25
Bibliography
  • Barsalou, L. W. Cognitive Psychology An Overview
    for Cognitive Scientists. Hillsdale, NJ,
    Lawrence Erlbaum and Associates.
  • Coren, S. Ward, L. M. (1989). Sensation and
    Perception, Third Edition. Fort Worth, NJ,
    Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
  • Fodor, J. A. Pylyshyn, Z. W. (1988).
    Connectionism and cognitive architecture a
    critical analysis. Cognition, 28, 3-71.
  • Goldstone, R. L., Barsalou, L. W. (1998).
    Reuniting perception and conception. Cognition,
    65, 231-262.
  • Lee, Y.-S., Vakoch, D. A., Wurm, L. H. (1996).
    Tone perception in Cantonese and Mandarin A
    cross-linguistic comparison. Journal of
    Psycholinguistic Research, 25, 527-542.
  • Marr, D. (1982). Vision. New York, W. H.
    Freeman Company.
  • Medin, D. L. Aguilar, C. (1999).
    Categorization. In Wilson, R. A. Keil, F. C.
    (Eds.) The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive
    Sciences (pp. 104-106). Robert A. Wilson and
    Frank C. Keil. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.
  • Miller, G. A. (1956). The magical number seven
    plus or minus two Some limits on our capacity
    for processing information. Psychological
    Review, 63, 81-97.
  • Pylyshyn, Z. W. (1999). Whats in your mind? In
    Lepore, E. Pylyshyn, Z. W. (Eds.) What is
    Cognitive Science (pp. 1-25). Oxford, Blackwell.
  • Shepard, R. N., Metzler, J. Mental rotation of
    three-dimensional objects. Science, 171,
    701-703.
  • Stroop, J. (1935). Studies of interference in
    serial verbal reactions. Journal of Experimental
    Psychology, 18, 624-643.
  • Wu, L., (1995). Perceptual Representation in
    Conceptual Combination. Doctoral dissertation,
    University of Chicago
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