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Cognitive Psychology

by Saul Mcleod, published 2007 The term cognitive psychology came into use with the publication of the book Cognitive Psychology by Ulric Neisser in 1967. Cognitive Psychology revolves around the notion that if we want to know what makes people tick then we need to understand the internal processes of their mind. Cognition literally means knowing. In other words, psychologists from this approach study cognition which is the mental act or process by which knowledge is acquired. Cognitive psychology focuses on the way humans process information, looking at how we treat information that comes in to the person (what behaviourists would call stimuli), and how this treatment leads to responses. In other words, they are interested in the variables that mediate between stimulus/input and response/output. Cognitive psychologists study internal processes including perception, attention, language, memory and thinking. The cognitive perspective applies a nomothetic approach to discover human cognitive processes, but have also adopted idiographic techniques through using case studies (e.g. KF, HM).

Typically cognitive psychologists use the laboratory experiment to study behaviour. This is because the cognitive approach is a scientic one. For example, participants will take part in memory tests in strictly controlled conditions. However, the widely used lab experiment can be criticised for lacking ecological validity (a major criticism of cognitive psychology). Cognitive psychology became of great importance in the mid 1950s. Several factors were important in this: o Dissatisfaction with the behaviourist approach in its simple emphasis on external behaviour rather than internal processes. o The development of better experimental methods. o Comparison between human and computer processing of information. The cognitive approach began to revolutionise psychology in the late 1950s and early 1960s, to become the dominant approach (i.e. perspective) in psychology by the late 1970s. Interest in mental processes had been gradually restored through the work of Piaget and Tolman. Other factors were important in the early development of the cognitive approach. For example, dissatisfaction with the behaviourist approach in its simple emphasis on behaviour rather than internal processes and the development of better experimental methods. But it was the arrival of the computer that gave cognitive psychology the terminology and metaphor it needed to

investigate the human mind. The start of the use of computers allowed psychologists to try to understand the complexities of human cognition by comparing it with something simpler and better understood i.e. an articial system such as a computer.

The History of Cognitive Psychology


* Norbert Wiener (1948) published Cybernetics: or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine, introducing terms such as input and output. * Tolman (1948) work on cognitive maps training rats in mazes, showed that animals had internal representation of behaviour. * Birth of Cognitive Psychology often dated back to George Millers (1956) The Magical Number 7 Plus or Minus 2. * Newell and Simons development of the General Problem Solver. * In 1960, Miller founded the Center for Cognitive Studies at Harvard with famous cognitivist developmentalist, Jerome Bruner.

* Ulric Neisser (1967) publishes "Cognitive Psychology", which marks the ofcial beginning of the cognitive approach. * Process models of memory Atkinson & Shiffrins (1969) Multi Store Model. * Cognitive approach highly inuential in all areas of psychology (e.g. biological, social, behaviourism, development etc.).

Cognitive Approach Summary


Key Features Mediational Processes Information Processing Computer Analogy Introspection (Wundt) Nomothetic (studies the group) Schema Machine Reductionism Methodology Lab Experiments Introspection (Wundt) Memory Psychology Interviews (Kohlberg, Piaget) Case Studies (KF, HM ) Observations (Piaget)

Computer Modelling Basic Assumptions Cognitive psychology is a pure science, based mainly on laboratory experiments. Behaviour can be largely explained in terms of how the mind operates, i.e. the information processing approach. The mind works in a way similar to a computer: inputting, storing and retrieving data. Mediational processes occur between stimulus and response.

Areas of Application Moral Development (Kohlberg) Eyewitness Testimony Memory Forgetting Selective Attention Perception Child Development (Piaget) Cognitive Behavioual Therapy Learning Styles (Kolb) Information Processing Cognitive Interview Education (Vygotsky, Bruner)

Face Recognition (Bruce and Young)

Strengths Limitations Scientic Highly applicable (e.g. therapy, EWT) Combines easily with approaches: Behaviourism + Cog = Social Learning Biology + Cog = Evolutionary Psy Many empirical studies to support theories Ignores biology (e.g. testosterone) Experiments - low ecological validity Humanism - rejects scientic method Behaviourism - cant objectively study unobservable behaviour Introspection is subjective Machine reductionism

Evaluation of the Cognitive Approach


Skinner criticises the cognitive approach as he believes that only external stimulus - response behaviour should be studied as this can be scientically measured. Therefore, mediation processes (between stimulus and response) do not exist as they cannot be seen and measured. Skinner continues to nd problems with

cognitive research methods, namely introspection (as used by Wundt) due to its subjective and unscientic nature. Carl Rogers believes that the use of laboratory experiments by cognitive psychology have low ecological validity and create an articial environment due to the control overvariables. Rogers emphasises a more holistic approach to understanding behaviour. The information processing paradigm of cognitive psychology views that minds in terms of a computer when processing information. However, there are important difference between humans and computers. The mind does not process information like a computer as computers dont have emotions or get tired like humans. Behaviourism assumes that people are born a blank slate (tabula rasa) and are not born with cognitive functions like schemas, memory or perception. The cognitive approach does not always recognise physical (re: biological psychology) and environmental (re: behaviourism) factors in determining behaviour.

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