Approaches- The cognitive appraoch Flashcards

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1
Q

Define cognitive approach

A

An approach focused on how our mental processes (thoughts perceptions and attention) affect behaviour

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2
Q

Define internal mental processes

A

Private operations of the mind such as perceptions and attention that mediate between stimulus and response

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3
Q

Define Schema

A

A mental framework of beliefs and expectations that influence cognitive processing.They are developed from experience

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4
Q

Define inference

A

The process whereby cognitive psychologists draw conclusions about the way mental processes operate in the basis of behaviour

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5
Q

Define cognitive neuroscience

A

the scientific study of biological structures that underpin cognitive processes

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6
Q

What is the direct opposite approach of the cognitive approach

A

The behaviourist approach

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7
Q

What are the assumptions of the cognitive approach

A

Internal mental processes can and should be studied scientifically. As a result the cognitive approach has investigated areas of human behaviour that were neglected by behaviourists such as memory perception and thinking.

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8
Q

Why do cognitive psycholgists have to make indirect hypothesises

A

Memory Perception and Thinking are private processes and cannot be observed so psychologists have to make inferences about what is going on inside people’s minds on the basis of their behaviour

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9
Q

How do Cognitive psychologists understand internal mental processes

A

They use Theoritical and computer models to help them

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10
Q

What is an example of a thoerotical model that is used to help psychologists

A

The information processing approach,which suggests that information flows through a cognitive system in a sequence of stages that include input storage and retrieval, is based on the way computers function and this suggests a similar process goes through the human mind

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11
Q

What’re schemas

A

‘packages’ of ideas and information developed through experience for example you have a schema for a chair- somethug that has legs that you can sit on-

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12
Q

What’re schemas

A

‘packages’ of ideas and information developed through experience for example you have a schema for a chair- somethug that has legs that you can sit on-

Extra info:an older person has more schemas compared to a baby as they have experineced more in life

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13
Q

Why are schemas usefull

A

They enable us to process lots of information quickly as it acts as a short cut that prevents us from being overwhelmed by environmental stimuli

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14
Q

Why might schemas be bad

A

They may distort our interpretations of sensory information leading to perpetual error

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15
Q

Who was Paul Broca

A

Someone who identified how damage to an area of the frontal lobe (which came to be known as Broca’s area) could permanently impair speech production

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16
Q

Evaluation-Scientific and objective methods

A

The emergence of cognitive neuroscience has enabled both biological and cognitive psychology to come together means that the study of the mind has established a credible scientific basis

17
Q

Why has the computer analogy (how humans think,input storage retrieval thingy) been criticised

A

Because machine reductionism ignores the influence of human emotion and motivation one the cognitive system and hie this may affect our way of thinking for example, evidence has been shown that human memory may be affected by emotional factors such as anxiety