ZeePedia

RECAP OF LAST LESSONS:AUTOMATICITY, Automatic Processing

<< ATTENTION:Subsidiary Task, Capacity Theory, Reaction Time & Accuracy, Implications
AUTOMATICITY (continued):Experiment, Implications, Task interference >>
img
Cognitive Psychology ­ PSY 504
VU
Lesson 11
RECAP OF LAST LESSONS
Attention can be explained by bottleneck or filter models as well as by capacity models. Filter
models assume that interference in attention is caused by a filter or an attenuator. Some filter
models assume that filters occur early, before recognition. Others assume that filter occurs
late, after semantic analysis. Capacity Models assume that interference is caused by overload
on the capacity.
AUTOMATICITY
Automatic Processing
Tasks vary considerably in the amount of mental effort required to perform them. Some skills
become so well-practiced and routine that they require very minimal mental capacity. Cognitive
Psychologists use the term automatic processing to refer to such skills. The more a process has
been practiced, the less attention it requires, and there is speculation that highly practiced
process require no attention at all such highly practiced processes that require little attention are
referred to as automatic.
Pros and cons
It allows us to perform routine activities without much concentration or mental effort: it does not
require much attention.
Automatic processes complete themselves without conscious control by the subject.
We may make silly mistakes.
We may fail to remember what we did.
We are not able to show others how we do a task.
When is a skill automatic?
According to Posner and Snyder (1975)
A skill is automatic if it:
1) Occurs without intention
2) Does not give rise to conscious awareness
3) Does not interfere with other mental activities
Automaticity: Another Perspective
Shiffrin & Schneider (1977) argue that it is best to think of Automaticity as a matter of degree
rather than a distinct category. A nice demonstration of the way practice affects attentional
limitations is the study reported by Underwood (1974) on the psychologist Moray, who has spent
many years studying shadowing (split attention studies). Moray can report most of the unattended
channels, for him shadowing has become automatic. Through a great deal of practice, the
process of shadowing has become partially automated.
More experiments
32
img
Cognitive Psychology ­ PSY 504
VU
Schneider & Fisk (1982), Schneider & Shiffrin (1977), Shiffrin & Dumais (1982), and Shiffrin &
Schneider (1977) performed a series of experiments contrasting controlled vs. automatic
processing.
They said automatic processes complete themselves without conscious control by the subject. In
the visual and auditory report tasks reviewed earlier, the registering of the stimuli in sensory
memory is an automatic process. Many aspects of driving a car and comprehending language
appear to be automatic. Controlled processing seems to require conscious control. Many higher
cognitive processes, such as performing mental arithmetic, are controlled.
In their experiments, subjects were required to scan visual arrays. The subjects were given a
target letter or number and are instructed to scan a series of visual displays for the target.
Visual arrays
1st condition
·
J
letter to be recognized
·
GK
·
MF
2nd condition
8
number to be recognized
MN
L8
The task
Two factors are varied
Each frame has one, two or four characters on it. This factor is referred to as frame
size.
The other important variable is the relationship between the target item and the
items on the frames.
In the same category condition, the target is a letter as well all the characters on
the frame. In the different category condition the target is a number surrounded by
letters.
If the target appears on the frame, subject responds yes, if it doesn't appear on the
frame the subject responds no.
Results
In the different category condition
Reaction Time was 80 milliseconds, and Accuracy was 95%
In the Same Category condition
Reaction Time was 400 milliseconds, and Accuracy was also 95%
In the Different category condition
No effect of frame size
In the same category condition
Accuracy and RT deteriorated as frame size increased.
33
img
Cognitive Psychology ­ PSY 504
VU
Schneider and shiffrin argued that before coming into the laboratory, subjects were so well
practiced at detecting a number among letters that this process was automatic. In contrast, when
subjects had to identify a letter among letters, controlled processing was needed. In this situation
subjects had to attend separately to each letter in frame and compare it with the target. All these
steps took time, and thus subjects were able to inspect each frame properly and achieve
respectable levels of performance only when slides were presented slowly. Also the more letters
that were in a frame, the more slowly in the frames had to be presented, since subjects had to
check each letter in the frame separately. In contrast, subjects could check all items
simultaneously in the different category situation to see if any were numbers. They were able to
perform this processing simultaneously because process was automatic
Implications
Schneider & Shiffrin argued that detecting numbers among letters didn't place any load on the
capacity and that is why subjects were not affected by frame size.
Detecting letters among letters however was a hard task which placed a lot on attention capacity
which was affected negatively as frame size increased.
34
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION:Historical Background
  2. THE INFORMATION PROCESSING APPROACH
  3. COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY:Brains of Dead People, The Neuron
  4. COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY (CONTINUED):The Eye, The visual pathway
  5. COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY (CONTINUED):Hubel & Wiesel, Sensory Memory
  6. VISUAL SENSORY MEMORY EXPERIMENTS (CONTINUED):Psychological Time
  7. ATTENTION:Single-mindedness, In Shadowing Paradigm, Attention and meaning
  8. ATTENTION (continued):Implications, Treisman’s Model, Norman’s Model
  9. ATTENTION (continued):Capacity Models, Arousal, Multimode Theory
  10. ATTENTION:Subsidiary Task, Capacity Theory, Reaction Time & Accuracy, Implications
  11. RECAP OF LAST LESSONS:AUTOMATICITY, Automatic Processing
  12. AUTOMATICITY (continued):Experiment, Implications, Task interference
  13. AUTOMATICITY (continued):Predicting flight performance, Thought suppression
  14. PATTERN RECOGNITION:Template Matching Models, Human flexibility
  15. PATTERN RECOGNITION:Implications, Phonemes, Voicing, Place of articulation
  16. PATTERN RECOGNITION (continued):Adaptation paradigm
  17. PATTERN RECOGNITION (continued):Gestalt Theory of Perception
  18. PATTERN RECOGNITION (continued):Queen Elizabeth’s vase, Palmer (1977)
  19. OBJECT PERCEPTION (continued):Segmentation, Recognition of object
  20. ATTENTION & PATTERN RECOGNITION:Word Superiority Effect
  21. PATTERN RECOGNITION (CONTINUED):Neural Networks, Patterns of connections
  22. PATTERN RECOGNITION (CONTINUED):Effects of Sentence Context
  23. MEMORY:Short Term Working Memory, Atkinson & Shiffrin Model
  24. MEMORY:Rate of forgetting, Size of memory set
  25. Memory:Activation in a network, Magic number 7, Chunking
  26. Memory:Chunking, Individual differences in chunking
  27. MEMORY:THE NATURE OF FORGETTING, Release from PI, Central Executive
  28. Memory:Atkinson & Shiffrin Model, Long Term Memory, Different kinds of LTM
  29. Memory:Spread of Activation, Associative Priming, Implications, More Priming
  30. Memory:Interference, The Critical Assumption, Limited capacity
  31. Memory:Interference, Historical Memories, Recall versus Recognition
  32. Memory:Are forgotten memories lost forever?
  33. Memory:Recognition of lost memories, Representation of knowledge
  34. Memory:Benefits of Categorization, Levels of Categories
  35. Memory:Prototype, Rosch and Colleagues, Experiments of Stephen Read
  36. Memory:Schema Theory, A European Solution, Generalization hierarchies
  37. Memory:Superset Schemas, Part hierarchy, Slots Have More Schemas
  38. MEMORY:Representation of knowledge (continued), Memory for stories
  39. Memory:Representation of knowledge, PQ4R Method, Elaboration
  40. Memory:Study Methods, Analyze Story Structure, Use Multiple Modalities
  41. Memory:Mental Imagery, More evidence, Kosslyn yet again, Image Comparison
  42. Mental Imagery:Eidetic Imagery, Eidetic Psychotherapy, Hot and cold imagery
  43. Language and thought:Productivity & Regularity, Linguistic Intuition
  44. Cognitive development:Assimilation, Accommodation, Stage Theory
  45. Cognitive Development:Gender Identity, Learning Mathematics, Sensory Memory