Describe Plato’s view
What is dualism?
the mind is separate from the body
What is rationalism?
knowledge is acquired through reason, without the aid of the senses
Describe Aristotle’s view
What is empiricism?
Knowledge comes only or primarily through sensory experience
What is structuralism?
Focused on identifying the basic building blocks of the conscious experience with analytic/experimental introspection
Who is Wilhelm Wundt?
Founded the first formal lab that studied psychological processes and proposed INTROSPECTION
Who is Edward Titchener?
Established experimental study of psychology and suggested that all things (sensations, memories) can be broken down into elements
What is funcitonalism?
Who is William James?
What is behaviourism?
Who is Ulric Neisser?
Responsible for birth of cognitive psychology
What was the main aim of the cognitive revolution?
understanding cognition involves breaking thinking down into abstract information into a series of steps or stages
What is the invariance assumption?
human cognition is promoted by processes that are
invariant & regular across situations
What is the control assumption?
situations/experiments can & must be controlled to allow
conclusions to be attributed specifically to the variable being manipulated
What are Personal-level explanations?
focus on describing & understanding the person as
an active agent interacting with their environment
What are Subpersonal-level explanations?
focus on describing & understanding the brain
mechanisms that support cognitions
What is cognitive ethology?
States that cognitions are contextualized to the situation in which they occur & vary as a function of the
situation
According to the classic cognitive view, what are the two things present at an information processing stage?
- Processes: what is manipulating or transforming the representation (the + in an equation)
What is the information theory?
• We are information processors and it takes time to process information
• We process information to reduce uncertainty
- The less likely an ‘event’, the more information processing
What is Hick’s law?
a mathematical equation to show that the more information contained in a signal (the more bits), the longer it takes to make a (correct) response to this signal (the more ‘energy’ consumed)
What is decision fatigue?
taxing cognitive processes has consequences on our ability to make later decisions
What is ecological validity?
the extent to which the findings of a research study are able to be generalized to real-life settings
What is a schema?
organized mental templates to assist information processing that direct exploration of the environment