C o g n i t i v e P s y c h o l o g y
Psychology 333 Fall, 1997 R.L. Terry, Ph.D.
SH 303; Tel: 7316
Introduction
Psychology students learn early in their introductory courses that some of the very first people who were systematically concerned with (human) behavior were theologians (or "priests"). Then persons dissatisfied with the primacy of deistic and other spiritual explanations broke from the theological camp and developed ideas that we might call philosophical. Finally, in the Nineteenth Century, behavioral scientists emerged and tried to replace philosophical speculation with empirical verification. On this historical evolution of psychology, some wag commented that when psychology left theology, it lost its soul; when psychology left philosophy, it lost its mind.
Modern psychology is said to have begun in 1879 with Wilhelm Wundt's setting up his laboratory in Leipzig. Wundt was interested in applying the method of introspection to illuminate the structure of the mind. Wundt said that people have minds and engage in mental activities. But just a few years later, Sigmund Freud began to show that the great bulk of mental activity was unconscious and inaccessible to introspection. Freud said that because of unconscious mental forces, people are doomed to be irrational, much in the same way that non human animals are. In the early Twentieth Century, John B. Watson argued that "mind" was a fiction--the only thing we can know of another person is what the person does or says. Watson left us with the popular definition of psychology: "The scientific study of the behavior of individuals." So we have gone from a mind that is knowable (Wundt) to a mind that is unknowable (Freud) to no mind at all (Watson).
For the next half century, psychologists tended to see (human) behaviors as measurable effects of identifiable causes. This S-R model of behavior dominated American psychology during these years. Humans no longer thought; they responded. Also at this time, however, dissidents were arguing that humans were not just "bigger and better" than rats and pigeons. People, they argued, are active (not passive); they act as well as react; they perceive, interpret, and reason. In short, people have minds and engage in mental activities. These dissidents are called cognitive psychologists, who have tried to bring the scientific methodology of the behaviorists to the study of covert, mental processes. Cognitive psychologists have apparently won the day (if only for the time being) in showing that the traditional S-R model does not describe the complexities of human behavior.
Course Objectives
This course is an advanced introduction to the field of cognitive psychology. Our concern is with understanding human endeavor, as distinct from animal behavior. Humans have minds or at least humans engage in mental (i.e., covert) activities. We select and attend to stimuli; we perceive them; we remember and forget them. We abstract and generalize and symbolize; we conceptualize. We think; we reason; we solve problems, sometimes creatively. How we do all these wonderful things is the content of this course.
There are a number of valuable goals that can be achieved by a diligent study of cognitive psychology. We will learn about some behavioral capabilities that seem to distinguish humans from other animals; we transcend our animal heritage through the use of our cognitive capabilities. If there is a "new look" in psychology today, it is the entrenchment of cognitive psychology prin-ciples; again, the S-R model is at best incomplete. Moreover, perhaps by studying such phenomena as memory and problem solving we can improve our own cognitive skills or gain insight into how to improve the cognitive skills of other people. Thus, this course should help us to understand better human behavior in the abstract, general psychology, and ourselves and other people.
Several skills will be tapped in this course--critical thinking, spontaneous oral argument; laboratory methods, research report writing, poster and formal lecture presentation. In short, students will engage in a variety of passive and active learning and teaching activities.
Reading Assignment
We will read the following book in its entirety:
Solso, R. L. (1995). Cognitive Psychology (4
This is a readable introduction to many of the important topics in the field. The book is available in the Bookstore, and used copies are available.
Course Expectations
Enrollment in the course indicates that you have completed the GDR two-course sequence in a science other than psychology and that you have had Basic Principles of Psychology (Psy 111) (many students will have had more psychological background to their advantage). Also note that this is a 300-level course, and the expected level of scholarship will be that of talented college juniors.
This course is structured more along the lines of a seminar/laboratory class than a traditional lecture class. An intent is to have greater student participation than is usual. Besides engaging in active class discussion of materials, students will participate in class and laboratory demonstra-tions of cognitive psychological principles. Many of the notions of cognitive psychology are quite abstract and complicated (we are dealing with extremely complicated behavior); the demon-strations are meant to clarify some of them.
First, there will be a classroom component of the class. This is when, for the most part, the sub-stantive content of the course will be discussed. On the whole, the discussion will only parallel the readings, so it is important that you do the readings before the class sessions in which the materials are scheduled. Students are expected to participate in the class discussions. The general topics are listed below. These classroom assignments will form the basis of periodic examinations. There are three hour-examinations scheduled during class on September 18, October 9, and November 6, and a three-hour final examination during Exam Week. Each of these will be essay exams, and, by necessity, they will have to be cumulative.
Second, there will be explicitly scheduled laboratory meetings. The laboratory projects will be partly demonstrational and partly experimental. The September 8th lab project will form the basis of the first Lab Report to be handed in on September 22. The signal detection lab project is self-contained; you will not write it up. However, the serial position lab exercise will be written up as Lab Report #2 to be handed in on October 6. The actual lab on October 6 is dedicated to discussing your proposal for your individualized research project; that is, this is not really a laboratory session, but we will use the lab time to listen to your proposal and provide feedback to you. The mood congruence project is self-contained, and you will not write it up. The two lab sessions immediately following the Midterm Recess will be devoted to collecting data for your indivi-dualized projects; you may have to schedule research participants at other times. The facial identi-fication lab and the artificial intelligence labs will be self-contained, and they will not be written up. Your individualized research will be written up as a poster presentation, scheduled for the November 17th lab session.
Third, in lieu of a usual term paper, you will make a 20-minute formal presentation to the class expanding on the topic of your poster presentation, complete with theoretical and research background, methods (perhaps with a demonstration), results, and implications. The presentation will resemble a lecture or conference presentation. It will also be written out in APA format and handed in no later than December 2.
Evaluations
The hour-exams will each contribute 10% toward the final grade; the final exam will contribute another 20%. The two lab reports will each be worth 10%; the poster presentation will be worth 10%, and the class presentation will count 10%. Attendance and participation will contribute to the remaining 10%.
Class and Laboratory Schedule
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Date Activity (Hours) Topic Assignment
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Sep 2 Class (2) Introduction & Basic Concepts Syllabus; Solso 1
Sep 4 Class (1) Historical Background
Sep 8 Lab (2) Cerebral Lateralization of Linguistic Functions
Sep 9 Class (2) Neurological & Biochemical Bases Solso 2, 5
Sep 11 Class (1) Attention & Perception Solso 3, 4
Sep 15 Lab (2) Signal Detection: Effects of Signal Strength and Decision Criterion
Sep 16 Class (2) Consciousness Solso 5
Sep 17 Class (1) Examination I
Sep 22 Lab Report #1 due at Lab Time
Sep 22 Lab (2) Serial Position Effect: Effects of Rate of Presentation and Delay of Measurement
Sep 23 Class (2) History of Memory Research Solso 6
Sep 25 Class (1) Sensory Memory Solso 6
Sep 29 Lab (2) Mood Congruence Effects on Memory
Sep 30 Class (2) Short Term Memory Solso 7
Oct 2 Class (1) Long Term Memory Solso 8, 9
Oct 6 Lab Report #2 due at Lab Time
Oct 6 Lab (2) Discussion of Individual Project Proposals
Oct 7 Class (2) Forgetting Solso 10
Oct 9 Class (1) Examination II
Oct 13 Canceled for Midterm Break
Oct 14 Canceled for Midterm Break
Oct 16 Class (1) Psycholinguistics Solso 11, 12
Oct 20 Lab Data Collection for Individual Projects
Oct 21 Class (2) Cognitive Development: Childhood Solso 13
Oct 23 Class (1) Adult Cognition Solso 13
Oct 27 Lab Data Collection for Individual Projects
Oct 28 Class (2) Social Cognition Solso 14
Oct 30 Class (1) Social Cognition, Cont.
Nov 3 Lab (2) Computer Generation of Faces
Nov 4 Class (2) Eyewitness Identification
Nov 6 Class (1) Examination III
Nov 10 Lab (2) Artificial Intelligence
Nov 11 Class (2) Intelligence Solso 16
Nov 13 Class (1) Problem Solving Solso 15
Nov 17 Lab (2) Poster Presentation of Individual Projects
Nov 18 Class (2) Creativity
Nov 20 Class (1) Psychopathology and Cognition
Nov 24 Lab (2) Oral Presentation of Individual Projects
Nov 25 Class (2) Oral Presentation of Individual Projects
Nov 27 Canceled for Thanksgiving
Dec 1 Lab (2) Oral Presentation of Individual Projects
Dec 2 Class (2) Oral Presentation of Individual Projects
Dec 2 Write-up of Individual Project due at Class Time
Dec 4 Class (1) Conclusions & Wrap-up
TBA Finals Week Examination IV