Psychology ch. 8
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Psychology ch. 8 - Leaderboard
Psychology ch. 8 - Details
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Thinking | Any mental activity or processing of information including learning, remembering, perceiving, communicating, believing and deciding |
Cognitive economy | Allows us to simplify what we attend to and keep the information we need for decision making to a manageable minimum |
Thin slicing | Our ability to extract useful information from small bits of behaviour |
Cognitive bias | Systematic error in thinking |
Representative heuristic | Heuristic that involves judging the probability of an event by its superficial similarity to a prototype |
Base rate | How common a characteristic or behaviour is in the general population |
Availability heuristic | Heuristic that involves estimating the likelihood of an occurrence based on the ease with which it comes to our minds |
Hindsight bias | Our tendency to over-estimate how well we could have predicted something after it has already occurred |
Top-down processing | Filling in the gaps of missing information using our experience and background knowledge |
Bottom-up processing | Constructing meaning from something by slowly building up understanding through experience |
Concepts | Our knowledge and ideas about a set of objects, actions, and characteristics that share core properties |
Decision making | The process of selecting among a set of possible alternative |
Framing | The way a question is formulated can influence the decisions people make |
Neuro-economics | Researches that are interested in how the brain works while making financial decisions |
Problem solving | Generating a cognitive strategy to accomplish a goal |
Algorithms | Step-by-step learned procedure used to solve a problem |
Salience | How attention-grabbing something is |
Mental set | Phenomenon of becoming stuck in a specific problem-solving strategy, inhibiting our ability to generate alternatives |
Functional fixedness | Difficulty conceptualising that an object typically used for one purpose can be used for another |
What are the obstacles to problem solving? | Salience, mental sets, and functional fixedness |
Embodiment models | Our knowledge is organised and accessed in a manner that enables us to stimulate our actual experiences |
Language | Largely arbitrary system of communication that combines symbols in rule-based ways to create meaning |
What are the four levels of analysis to study language? | Phonemes, morphemes, syntax, and extralinguistic information |
Phonemes | Category of sounds our vocal apparatus produces |
Morphemes | The smallest meaningful unit of speech |
Semantics | Meaning derived from words and sentences |
Syntax | Grammatical rules that govern how words are composed into meaningful strings |
Morphological markers | Morphemes |
Extralinguistic information | Elements of communication that aren't part of the content of language but are critical to interpreting its meaning |
Sensitive period | An interval during which people are more receptive to learning and can acquire new knowledge more easily |
Metalinguistic | Awareness of how language is structures and used |
Generative | Allowing an infinite number of unique sentences to be created by combining words in novel ways |
Nativist | Account of language acquisition that suggests children are born with some basic knowledge of how language works |
Language acquisition device | Hypothetical organ in the brain in which nativists believe knowledge of syntax resides |
Social pragmatics | Account of language acquisition which proposes that children infer what words and sentences mean from context and social interactions |
General cognitive processing | Proposes that children's ability to learn language results from general skills children apply across a variety of activities |
Linguisitic determinism | View that all thought is represented verbally and that, as a result, our language defines our thinking |
Linguistic relativity | View that characteristics of language shape our thought processes |
Whole word recognition | Reading strategy that involves identifying common words based on their appearance without having to sound them out |
Phonetic decomposition | Reading strategy that involves sounding out words by drawing correspondences between printed letters and sounds |