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Cognitive
Psychology PSY 504
VU
Lesson
02
THE
INFORMATION PROCESSING
APPROACH
The
information processing approach,
unlike the stimulus-response
model of behaviorism,
looks
at
how input is transformed
into output. In other words,
what happens between
sensation and
behavior
is amore important question
for cognitive psychologists
than just which
sensation
produced
which behavior. Cognitive
Psychology treats the
sensation as bits of information
which
are
subjected to various processes in
the mind and ultimately
behavior may or may not
result
from
this.
These
processes are usually
performed in stages. There
are also different layers or
levels of
processing
in each stage. We can talk
about these layers as levels
of description rather
than
actual
process itself. Just as in a
computer we can talk about
hardware level and software
level
descriptions
of a process, we can also
talk about human information
processing as having a
hardware
level description - such as
what happens in the brain or
nervous system when a
sensation
occurs and a software
level description like
when we close our eyes to
recall an
image
of that sensation, how are
we able to recall the
image.
The
hardware level description
may consist of studying the
visual sensation itself. And we
can
study
how the sensory neurons
carry the information higher
in the system. We can study
the
visual
cortex, the part of the
brain concerning itself with
visual processing. The
connection of
visual
cortex with other parts of
the brain would also
come under a hardware level
description of
the
process. Then there are
complex processes in the
brain we don't know enough
about.
Afterwards,
afferent neurons take the
decisions via nerves to the
muscles which implement
the
decision.
The above description would
be the summary of a hardware
level understanding of
the
different
processes underlying visual
processing.
A
software level description
would start at the sensation
but then continue with
sensory storage,
discuss
the possibility of a filter
underlying selective attention,
then move on to short
term/working
memory
which will process and
transform the material into
something that can be kept
in the long
term
memory. From Long term
memory the information is
retrieved back into the
working memory
for
use when needed. We will
discuss these processes in
great detail in the
following Lessons so
at
the moment you shouldn't be
too concerned if you don't
grasp these concepts
straight away.
We
have used the example of
attention in the Lesson to
show how doing two
tasks at the same
time
can impair the quality of
performance at both tasks.
This has allowed
psychologists to
generate
limited resource or limited
capacity models of attention, a
topic we will discuss in
much
greater
detail later on in the
course.
Cognitive
Psychologists generate these
descriptions of the different
stages of information
processing
and then they develop
models that incorporate
these descriptions into new
theoretical
frameworks.
These models are then
tested in the laboratory
using experiments mostly on
human
subjects.
3
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