E-2 Distributed Cognition Flashcards

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1
Q

Important person with Distributed Cognition

A

Roy Pea

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2
Q

What is distributed cognition?

A
  • a theory of learning in which cognition is distributed across people, tools, time, and space
  • cognition and intelligence occur beyond confines of the head
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3
Q

Distributed Cognition: Historical Perspective

A
  • DC emerged out of constructivist viewpoints that learning happens socially
  • does NOT focus on intelligence as the only attribute of the individual BUT intelligence occurs in activity
  • it occurs beyond the confines of our head
  • DC rejects this isolationist view of intelligence
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4
Q

how is cognition distributed?

A
  1. across materials
  2. across people
  3. across time
  4. across space
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5
Q

how is cognition distributed?

-across material

A
  • tools and cognitive artifacts
  • they contain the intelligence of their designers within them
  • can increase intelligence
  • BUT can also shape and constrain thinking
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6
Q

how is cognition distributed?

across people

A

-groups can accomplish more than any one person

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7
Q

how is cognition distributed?

across time

A

what we learn before impacts what we know now

-the knowledge of our predecessors is contained in the tools we use

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8
Q

how is cognition distributed?

across space

A

-we access spaces particularly in our on/offline worlds

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9
Q

cognitive artifacts

A
  • these are the tools that mediate thinking
  • they contain the intelligence of their designers within them
  • are human-made devices constructed to enhance cognition … allowing “higher-order” thinking
  • how things are designed and represented matters for thinking and learning
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10
Q

cognitive artifacts examples

A
  • externalizing to reduce memory load –> diaries, reminders, calendars, notes, lists, post-its, piles, flagged emails
  • modifying existing representations–> crossing off, underlining, highlighting
  • externally manipulating items into different structures –> playing scrabble, organizing cards in your hand
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11
Q

cognitive artifacts as educational tools

A

education often results in making far too many people look ‘dumb’ because they are not allowed to use resources, whereas outside of education we all use resources

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12
Q

affordances

A

tools have affordances or clues about how to use them

  • affordances depend on the current context and the goal
  • objects thus carry intelligence “in” them

ex: button (push it and light goes on), switch (change it and light goes on)

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13
Q

constraints

A

tools also have constraints or characteristics that prevent us from using them in certain ways

  • when creating tools, designers make choices that structure tools in certain ways
    ex: lego assembly kits compared to your legos as a child
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14
Q

representations

A
  • are an abstraction of a real thing or event
  • they are one type of cognitive artifact
  • they all have different affordances and constraints as a result of design decisions
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15
Q

representations as cognitive artifacts

A

strong representations can facilitate understanding and poor representations can hinder understanding

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16
Q

good representations…

A
  1. turn a problem into an experimental task, not a reflective one (ex: comparing flights)
  2. capture only essential elements of the event or thing (leaves out unimportant info)
  3. address the needs of the person using the representation (easy to interpret)
  4. are appropriate for the task at hand
    (help people make judgments, as well as find important patterns and structures
17
Q

distributed cognition summary

A
  • cognition, learning and intelligence are not simply in the brain
  • cognition is spread out across people, time, tools, and places
  • cognitive artifacts can facilitate or hinder our ability to think, problem, solve, and learn
  • representations are one type of cognitive artifacts