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Full Summary Cognitive Psychology (UPDATED VERSION)

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Full summary of cognitive psychology. - Attention - STM - LTM - Language - Problem solving - Decision making

Institution
Course

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1. Attention

2. Short term memory & Working memory

3. Long term memory

4. Language

5. Problem solving

6. Decision making



Week 1 - Attention
Chapter 4 - Attention

Learning goal Key terms

Pioneering studies

Basic Attention → the ability to focus on specific stimuli or locations
definitions
Selective attention → attending to one thing while ignoring others (attempt to focus on maths problem, ignore background people talking)

Distraction → online stimulus interfering with the processing of another stimulus

Divided attention → paying attention to more than one thing at once

, Attentional capture → rapid shifting of attention usually caused by a stimuli such as a loud noise, bright light, or sudden movement

Spatial attention
Visual scanning → movements of the eyes from one location or object to another
- Covert
- Overt

Broadbent’s (1) 1800’s-1900s - Early research attempted to study mind by introspection
filter model of (2) 1920s - Behaviourism ignores attention, as tasks of introspection were difficult
attention (3) 1950’s attention returned when Braodbent introduced the information processing approach to cognition

WWII: Attention becomes important again
- WWII placed humans in situation where they are bombarded with information: attention
once again became important
- Use of tape recorded

Dichotic listening experiment
- 2 earbuds in different ears: focus attention on one ear ‘attended ear’
- Shadowing - repeat what you hear out loud in attended ear
- Then, without shifting attention try to see what you can take from ‘unattended ear’ (gender
of voice, content)

Dichotic listening study: Cherry (1953)
- “people can shadow spoken message presented, could report whether unattended message
was spoken by gender, but couldn’t report content
- “Participants are not aware of most info be presented to unattended ear”

Broadbent’s model of attention (1958)
- Sought to explain dichotic studies
- Bottleneck Model: filter restricts information flow, keeps large potion of info from getting through
- Early selection model: filter eliminates unattended info right at beginning of flow of information, before its consciously perceived

,
, - EARLY SELECTION, BOTTLE NECK MODEL (FILTER ELIMINATES UNATTENDED INFORMATION, BEFORE IT'S FULLY ANALYSED AND
CONSCIOUSLY PERCEIVED (BY DETECTOR)

Modification of Experiments led to modification of Broadbent's theory
Broadbent: the
Attenuation Moray (1959): dichotic listening experiment with name presented in unattended ear
Model - When name was presented, about ⅓ of participants detected it
- Cocktail party effect → ability to focus on one stimulus while filtering out a range of different noise

Gray and Weddderburn’s 1960 dear aunt jane experiment
- Attended ear: dear 7 jane, unattended ear: aunt 6. Message reported: Dear Aunt Jane
- Attention can jump from one ear to another

Treisman’s Attenuation model of attention (1964)
- Leaky filter model → since some of unattended message gets through the attenuator

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Uploaded on
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File latest updated on
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Number of pages
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Written in
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Type
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