Cognitive Psychology L1 - Introduction & Cognitive Neuroscience - 2024/25

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InstrumentalForsythia

Uploaded by InstrumentalForsythia

City University of Hong Kong

2024

Gilbert Lau

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cognitive psychology cognitive neuroscience cognitive processes introduction to psychology

Summary

These lecture notes provide an introduction to Cognitive Psychology, focusing on Cognitive Neuroscience and associated assessments. The document details the course structure, including topics, readings, and assessment guidelines. It also covers important concepts like 'Cognitive Psychology' and 'Neuroscience'.

Full Transcript

SS3712 – COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY L1 – INTRODUCTION & COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE GILBERT LAU 2024/25 Sem A ver. PLEASE DON’T CALL ME PROFESSOR, PROF. OR DR. … WHAT DO YOU EXPECT TO LEARN FROM THE COURSE? IN THIS COURSE…  Learn about how the brain acquire, processe...

SS3712 – COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY L1 – INTRODUCTION & COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE GILBERT LAU 2024/25 Sem A ver. PLEASE DON’T CALL ME PROFESSOR, PROF. OR DR. … WHAT DO YOU EXPECT TO LEARN FROM THE COURSE? IN THIS COURSE…  Learn about how the brain acquire, processes and output information  What affects our cognitive processes  Learn about cognitive psychological research Week Date Topic Readings Activities/Remarks 1 4 Sep Introduction Ch. 1 Cognitive Neuroscience Ch. 2 2 11 Sep Perception Ch. 3 Attention Ch. 4 3 18 Sep Public Holiday 4 25 Sep Short-term & Working Memory Ch. 5 Submission of group lists Long-term Memory I Ch. 6 By 10 pm 25 Sep 5 2 Oct Long-term Memory II Ch. 7 Experiment raffle Memory Errors Ch. 8 6 9 Oct Quiz 1 -- (Covers week 1 to 4) 7 16 Oct Laboratory Session 1 -- Experimental design 8 23 Oct Language Ch. 11 9 30 Oct Knowledge Ch. 9 10 6 Nov Laboratory Session 2 -- Data collection & Analysis 11 13 Nov Problem Solving Ch. 12 12 20 Nov Decision Making Ch. 13 Submission of presentation video by noon 20 Nov 13 27 Nov Quiz 2 -- (Covers week 5 to 12) TOPICS TO BE COVERED THIS SEMESTER  The Brain  Language  Perception  Knowledge  Attention  Problem Solving  Short Term Memory  Decision Making  Long Term Memory  Memory Errors TEXTBOOK  Goldstein, E. B. (2019). Cognitive psychology: Connecting mind, research, and everyday experience (5th ed.). Stamford, CT: Cengage Learning. ASSESSMENTS – QUIZZES (50%)  Quiz 1 (25%) – Weeks 1 to 4  Quiz 2 (25%) – Weeks 5 to 12  No make-up quiz will be arranged except extenuating circumstances  Multiple Choice & Short Answer Questions  Materials from the lectures and textbook will be covered in the quiz ASSESSMENTS – GROUP PROJECT (20% IN TOTAL)  Research Project & Participation (5%)  As a group, create and conduct experiment using PsychoPy (3%)  Collect at least 4 samples per group member  Each student should participate in 2 different experiments conducted by other groups (2%; 1% each)  Make sure you enter your Student ID (e.g. 5XXXXXXX) as participant ID when participating in experiments  Group Presentation (15%)  Video presentation in English, around 20 minutes  Content  Review literature of your experiment  Present the experiment and results  Discuss its implications  There is no requirement for all members to be in the presentation ASSESSMENTS – GROUP PROJECT (20%) (CONT’D)  Submissions  As a group  Video recording, presentation slides, PsychoPy experiment, & all participants’ raw data files  As an individual  Peer evaluation form  Due at noon on 20 November 2024 ASSESSMENTS – EXPERIMENTAL REPORT (30%)  Based on the experiment conducted for your group presentation  Written and submitted individually  Within 7 pages (12-pt font, double-line spacing), excluding title page, abstract, references, tables, and figures  Due at noon 7 Dec 2024 LATE SUBMISSION POLICY  One sub-grade deducted per calendar day (NOT WORKING DAY)  Submission after 7 days will be given zero mark ACADEMIC HONESTY & AVOID PLAGIARISM  Rules of thumb  Present your own work  Give proper acknowledgement of other’s work  Honestly report findings  When reporting others’ ideas and/or findings (including generative AI tools):  Put it in your own words  Don’t merely copy sentences or parts of sentences  Acknowledge the source  University Rules on Academic Honesty link: http://www.cityu.edu.hk/provost/academic_honesty/rules_on_academic_honesty.htm  For citations and references, please use APA formatting and citation style for this course IF YOU EVER NEED TO CONTACT ME…  Office: LI-5601  Email: [email protected]  Phone: +852 3442 9553 (WhatsApp available)  Office hours: By appointment MY HOPE BY THE END OF THE COURSE..  Learn the material (obviously)  Stimulate ideas to formulate new strategies for  Learning  Processing of information  Making decisions  …etc. ANY QUESTIONS? WHAT IS THIS WHAT IS THIS ? WHY IS COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY IMPORTANT?  Understand what’s going on in the brain  How do we know that thing is a dog instead of a wolf?  How are we able to recognize a face?  What goes on in your brain when you try to calculate 1 + 1?  Why some people can do it with ease?  Hacking the brain to  Improve functional efficiency such as education, marketing campaigns  Treat issues such as Alzheimer’s, speech issues, memory loss, etc. COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY  The study of mental processes  The Mind  Creates and controls mental functions  A system that creates representations of the world A BIT OF HISTORY  Donder’s reaction time experiment (1868)  Measure how long it takes for a person to make a decision with Reaction Time  Simple reaction time vs Choice reaction time  Why?  Infer the time difference as time required for decision making process WUNDT (1879)  Structuralism  Overall experience is determined by “sensations”  A combination of basic elements of experience  Wundt wanted to collect data with analytic introspection  Participants describe their experience and thought process in response to stimuli  Difficult to achieve as it requires training EBBINGHAUS (1885)  Rather than analytic introspection, he used quantitative methods “savings curve”  Tested himself in a memory experiment  How rapidly learned information is lost overtime  Used nonsense syllables such as DAX, QEH, LUH, etc. WILLIAM JAMES  Taught the first psychology course in Harvard  Wrote the first psychology textbook – Principles of Psychology (1890)  Report on observations of his own experience  Attention  Receive many senses at any point in time, but are never attended to  Attention takes possession in the mind  Withdrawal from some things in order to deal effectively with others BEHAVIORISM  Classical conditioning  Association of stimulus and involuntary response  Watson (1913)  Little Albert experiment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-wtL5Io3sS8  Pavlov (1927)  Dog experiment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jd7Jdug5SRc  Operant Conditioning  Association of voluntary behavior and consequence  B. F. Skinner (1931)  Shaping experiments https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TtfQlkGwE2U COGNITIVISM  Tolman’s rat maze (1938)  Placed rats in different spots of the same maze but they were still able to go back to the spot where food were  Rats are able to develop a cognitive map (even with precaution where they cannot determine food location with smell)  Something other than stimulus-response connections is happening in the brain INFORMATION PROCESSING APPROACH  Influenced by the rise of computers & artificial intelligence  Trace mental operations that are involved in cognition  Like lines of computer code, we follow a series of operations in our head STUDYING HIGHER MENTAL PROCESSES  We do more than just reacting to things  We can store memory (somehow), and take them out to use when needed Atkinson and Shiffrin’s model of memory NEUROPSYCHOLOGY  What happens physiologically in the brain?  Use brain imaging to identify regions for processing different kinds of information in the brain (EEG, fMRI scans, PET scans etc.) MODERN PSYCHOLOGY  Features more “real-world” situations  “Humans don’t just accept and store information, we make use of knowledge, to tackle issues”  Palmer’s experiment  Knowledge about the environment influence our perception BREAK NEURONS  The brain is made up of many neurons  Neurons have 3 sections  Dendrites  Soma  Axon  Terminal button (or bouton)  The gap between neurons is the Synapse  Fire impulse signals travel from Dendrites  Soma  Axon  Synapse  Dendrites … Fun fact Why does the brain is so wrinkly? THE BRAIN  Three parts  Hindbrain  Midbrain  Forebrain  Forebrain has four lobes for different purposes  Frontal lobe  Parietal lobe  Occipital lobe  Temporal lobe FUNCTIONS OF NEURONS  Have various functions  Feature detectors respond to specific features of stimuli  Some respond to complex stimuli  Follow hierarchical processing  Gradually passing information from lower to higher areas of the brain NEURAL REPRESENTATION OF SENSES  How stimuli or environment are represented in the brain?  Specificity coding  Specialized neurons fire signals (1 specific neuron fires for each different stimuli)  Unlikely to be the way our brain works  Population coding  A large number of neurons fire signals at the same time, forming a pattern  Sparse coding  A small group of neurons firing signals, forming a pattern ACTIVITY  Need 7 volunteers LOCALIZATION OF FUNCTION  Most cognitive functions are in the cerebral cortex  At first scientists thought the brain functions as an indivisible whole  Specific functions served by specific areas of the brain  Broca’s area & Wernicke’s area  Parietal lobe is for perceptions of touch, pressure, and pain  Frontal lobe is for coordination of senses and higher functions HOW WE STUDY THE BRAIN  Take measurements while presenting stimuli to research participants (in the form of pictures, movies, physical touch, etc.) DISTRIBUTED REPRESENTATION  Experience is multi-dimensional  Similar to neural representation, we can find regional patterns for different functions Yellow = episodic memory recall Blue = semantic memory recall NEURAL PATHWAYS  Rather than the entire brain lighting up at the same time, we can trace the paths of neurons lighting up Blue = Processing sounds, producing speech, saying words Red = Comprehension of words Both involved in understanding sentences NEURAL NETWORKS  Complex structural pathways  Acts as “highways” for information transmission  Our brain is always active, even when you’re resting (“Default Mode Network”)  Your CPU is always working as long as your computer is turned on (If it is off, you’re dead)  Perhaps this is the reason why our minds wander  Also happens when you’re doing tasks that don’t require much conscious attention (e.g. driving)  Function spans from attention to memory to creativity IF YOU WANT TO LEARN MORE ABOUT NEUROSCIENCE…  SS3711 – Biological Psychology  SS3720 – Neuropsychology  Experience it yourself!  Participate in EEG / fMRI experiments (and make some lunch money at the same time) WHAT WE’VE LEARNED TODAY  What is cognitive psychology  Different aspects of cognitive psychology  Some basic concepts of the brain

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