Chapter 4—Cognition and Language Flashcards
Cognition
Process by which our brains acquire knowledge and understanding of that knowledge through experience, sensations, and thought
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor Stage (birth-age 2)—we experience the world exclusively through sensing our environment; develop object permanence, the understanding that objects continue to exist even though we are not looking at or touching them
- Preoperational Stage (age 2-age 7)—develop symbolic thinking, in which we learn that things and ideas can be represented through symbols (e.g. words, gestures, pictures); we tend to focus on a single aspect of a experience (centration); inability to comprehend conservation; we don’t understand that other people have thoughts and perceptions different from our own (egocentric)
- Concrete Operational Stage (age 7-age 11)—we develop an understanding of conversation and the ability to begin to grasp mathematics; we become less egocentric, gaining the ability to consider that other people have different perspectives; we can think logically about concrete events and objects, but cannot think abstractly
- Formal Operational Stage (age 12-adulthood)—we develop the abilities of abstract and moral reasoning
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Insisted that there are substantial difference in the cognitive abilities of children and adults
When we encounter new experiences, we either assimilate those experiences into our existing schemas or we accommodate to them by adjusting our existing schemas
Schemas
Patterns of thought that serve to organize information gained from our personal experiences and beliefs into categories
Deductive Reasoning
Process of solving a problem by beginning with a set of rules and drawing conclusions and solutions from those rules
Also known as top-down reasoning
Inductive Reasoning
Process of solving a problem by beginning with particular instances or information and drawing conclusions and solutions from them
Also known as bottom-up reasoning
Representativeness Heuristic
Tendency to make decisions about actions or events based upon our standard representations of those events
Availability Heuristic
Tendency to make decisions about how likely an action or event is based upon how readily available similar information is in our memories
Belief Bias
Tendency to make judgements based upon personal beliefs rather than logic
Confirmation Bias
Tendency to focus on information that is in agreement with the beliefs we already have, rather than the information that is contrary to those beliefs
Overconfidence
Occurs when an individual overestimates the accuracy and validity of their judgements and knowledge
Belief Perserverance
Tendency to stick with one’s initial beliefs about something even after receiving new information that disproves or nullifies that initial belief
Intuition
Ability, developed by experience, to make choices or decisions based on ideas or perceptions that are not evident based on available information
Emotion
Instinctive state of mind based upon mood, circumstances, and relationships
Theory of Multiple Intelligences
Developed by Howard Gardner
Accounts for seven distinct types of intelligence—bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal, linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, and visual-spatial