NBSS: (behaviour) Human cognition Flashcards
what is the difference between sensation and perception?
SENSATION = information we receive by our sensory receptors: BIOLOGICAL PROCESS
PERCEPTION = interpretation of information - a process that our brain selects, organises and interprets sensations: COGNITIVE
what influences our perception of internal or external stimuli?
- attention - the degree to which we perceive stimuli is dependent on the degree of attention we pay to it
- information processing systems : recognition and knowledge
- emotions - affect what we attend to and perceive
do we have pre-existing information processing systems? what is this known as?
yes, allow us to interpret sensory inputs as we receive - assign and recognise meaning to sensory information
known as TOP DOWN PROCESSING
what are the three stages of skill acquisition?
- cognitive = initial learners, focused on understanding task, slower, conscious thinking
- associative = have better grasp
- autonomous = learners are highly skilled, minimal conscious effort
how can pain be ‘bottom up’ and ‘top down’?
- bottom up: new, novel, intense or threatening pain - vague pain can be ignored :example of ignored pain = epigastric
- top down: attention to painful events - e.g: if person is expecting pain or particularly fearful and catastrophic about pain experience
what are the different types of memory stores (schemas)?
- declarative knowledge/stores
- procedural knowledge/stores
The phenomenon of perception…..
A: results in a perfectly accurate representation of the world
B: Is an interpretation of sensory input, organising the input, and assigning meaning
C: Is the functioning of our sensory system (e.g. the process of stimulating our sensory receptors)
D: has evolved only recently
B: Is an interpretation of sensory input, organising the input, and assigning meaning
NOT C - that’s sensation definition
Let’s say you are at a loud party leaning in to listen to your friend talk to you. What kind of attention are you using?
A: Executive attention
B: Selective attention
C: Sustained attention
D: Divided attention
B: Selective attention
During a medical consultation the patient relies on their short-term/ working memory to retain information given by the health care professional. However, research shows that 50% of information given during a medical consultation is forgotten within 5 mins. Why is this the case?
A Limited processing capacity
B Recency effect in short-term memory
C Lack of schema in short-term memory
D Lack of visual cues to aid processing
A Limited processing capacity
What is declarative knowledge?
- “Knowing that”
- Episodic memory
- Personal experiences
- & Semantic memory
- Facts, ideas, concepts
- Explicit memory (conscious retrieval)
What is procedural knowledge?
- “Knowing how”
- Cognitive/Problem
- solving skills
- Perceptual skills
- Motor skills
- Repetition
- Classical conditioning
- Implicit memory (unconscious retrieval)