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THOUGHT AND KNOWLEDGE

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Mechanisms for receiving information, representing it with symbols, and manipulating it. ... Captures some of the actual characteristics of what ... Syllogism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THOUGHT AND KNOWLEDGE


1
THOUGHT AND KNOWLEDGE
2
  • think
  • Reason and reflect
  • Directed thinking
  • Must have a foundation of knowledge

3
BASIC FUNCTIONS OF THOUGHT
  • The Circle of Thought
  • Information-processing system
  • Mechanisms for receiving information,
    representing it with symbols, and manipulating
    it.
  • Thinking
  • The manipulation of mental representations

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ANALOGICAL REPRESENTATIONS
  • Mental representations
  • Main elements of thought
  • Analogical representations
  • Captures some of the actual characteristics of
    what they represent
  • Symbolic representations
  • Bear no relationship to the item they stand for.
  • For example

7
Mental Images
  • Mental images
  • Analogical representation
  • Our minds eye
  • A mental representation of information
  • Minds ear, minds fingers, etc
  • Visual imagery

8
  • PICTURE LIKE ASPECTS OF VISUAL IMAGERY
  • How can we study visual imagery
  • Introspection?
  • Mental rotation experiments
  • Normal or mirror r
  • Roger Shepherd and Jacqueline Metzler
  • Image scanning experiments

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  • IMAGES AND PICTURES
  • Picture and image related to each other
  • Similar brain regions are used.
  • Can be very specific
  • Brain damage provides more support
  • Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
  • Pictures and images, not always the same
  • Mental images percepts

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SYMBOLIC REPRESENTATIONS
  • Concepts
  • a category of objects, events, or ideas that have
    common properties
  • Types of Concepts
  • Formal concepts
  • A concept that can be clearly defined by a set of
    rules or properties
  • Natural concepts
  • A concept that has no fixed set of defining
    features but has a set of characteristic features
  • Prototype
  • A member of a natural concept that possesses all
    or most of its characteristic features

15
  • Propositions
  • A mental representation of the relationship
    between concepts
  • Schemas, Scripts, and Mental Models
  • Schema
  • A generalization about categories of objects,
    places, events, and people
  • Script
  • A mental representation of familiar sequences of
    activity
  • Humor
  • Mental model
  • A cluster of propositions representing our
    understanding of objects and processes that
    guides our interaction with those things
    (analogical as well as symbolic)

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  • Go back

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THINKING STRATEGIES
  • Reasoning
  • The process by which people generate and evaluate
    arguments and reach conclusions about them.
  • Formal Reasoning aka logical reasoning
  • The process of following a set of rigorous
    procedures for reaching valid conclusions
  • Algorithm
  • A systematic procedure that cannot fail to
    produce a correct solution to a problem, if a
    solution exists.

20
  • Rules of logic
  • Sets of statements that provide a formula for
    drawing valid conclusions
  • if-then
  • Deduction
  • General rule to specific cases
  • Syllogism
  • An argument made up of two propositions, called
    premises, and a conclusion based on those
    premises.
  • Premise
  • Set of statements wherein a conclusion can be
    drawn

21
  • Pitfalls in our reasoning
  • Belief bias
  • What we know and believe biases our reasoning
    process
  • Confirmation bias
  • The tendency to pay more attention to evidence in
    support of ones hypothesis than to evidence that
    refutes that hypothesis
  • Limits on working memory
  • Difficult to hold and manipulate large amounts of
    info. in working memory.

22
  • Informal Reasoning
  • The process of evaluating a conclusion, theory,
    or course of action on the basis of the
    believability of evidence
  • Inductive reasoning
  • Specific cases to general rule
  • Heuristics
  • Time-saving mental short-cuts used in reasoning

23
  • The Anchoring Heuristic
  • A mental shortcut that involves basing judgments
    on existing information
  • The Representativeness Heuristic
  • A mental shortcut that involves judging whether
    something belongs in a given class on the basis
    of its similarity to other members of that class.
  • The Availability Heuristic
  • A mental shortcut through which judgments are
    based on information that is most easily brought
    to mind.

24
PROBLEM SOLVING
  • Strategies for Problem Solving
  • Means-End Analysis
  • A step by step approach, sub goals to final
    goals, constantly analyzing the means needed to
    reach the end.
  • decomposition
  • Working Backward
  • Using Analogies
  • Finding similarities between current problem and
    one faced in the past.

25
  • Obstacles to Problem Solving
  • Multiple Hypothesis
  • Too many possible solutions, too difficult to
    choose the right one.
  • Mental Sets
  • The tendency for old patterns of problem solving
    to persist, even when they might not always be
    the most efficient alternative.
  • Functional fixedness
  • A tendency to think about familiar objects in
    familiar way that may prevent using them in other
    ways

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  • Ignoring Negative Evidence
  • Absence of evidence can provide important
    information for or against a hypothesis
  • Confirmation Bias
  • Anchoring heuristic

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DECISION MAKING
  • Evaluating Options
  • Comparing Attributes
  • Utility
  • A subjective measure of value
  • Estimating Probabilities
  • Expected value
  • The total benefit to be expected if a decision
    were to be repeated several times
  • (Probability of gain x size of gain)
    (probability of loss x amount of loss)
  • If greater than zero, then.if less than zero,
    then.

30
  • Biases and Flaws in Decision Making
  • Gains, Losses, and Probabilities
  • Loss aversion
  • Biased in our perceptions of probability
  • Unrealistically confident of our predictions
  • How Biased Are We?

31
  • Naturalistic Decision Making
  • A more realistic approach to finding solutions to
    problems
  • Situation awareness
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