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Chapter Eight

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Title: Chapter Eight


1
Chapter Eight
  • Cognitive Development Information Processing
    Perspectives

2
Information Flow and the Multistore Model
  • Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin (1968)
    developed a multistore model of the information
    processing system.
  • The first component is the sensory store (or
    sensory register), in which stimuli are noticed
    and briefly available for further processing.
  • The second information processing store is the
    short-term store (STS). Here stimuli are retained
    for several seconds and operated on (also called
    working memory).
  • New information that is operated on while in the
    STS passes into the long-term store (LTS).
  • This is the vast, relatively permanent storehouse
    of information that includes your knowledge and
    impressions of the world.

3
The Information-Processing System
Responses
Environmental Input
Sensory Store
Short-term (working) memory
Long-term memory
Executive control processes
4
Other Information-Processing Theories
  • Similar theories propose that the mind like a
    computer, and thought to be of limited capacity.
  • Also included in most information-processing
    models is a concept of executive control
    processes, or metacognition.
  • These include processes by which we plan,
    monitor, and control all phases of information
    processing.

5
Differences in Information-Processing Capacity
  • STS (short-term store) is usually assessed using
    memory span. Memory span refers to the number of
    rapidly presented and unrelated items that can be
    recalled in exact order.
  • Age differences in memory span are highly
    reliable. This differences, however, might
    represent differences in strategy use, rather
    than in age and capacity.

6
Differences in Information-Processing Capacity
  • Cowan and his colleagues also discovered that
    span of apprehension could measure STS capacity.
    The span of apprehension refers to the number of
    items people can keep in mind at one time.
  • Prior knowledge also effects memory. Knowledge
    base, how quickly children process information,
    also accounts for differences.

7
Strategies and Knowledge of Thinking
  • Information processing often depends on
    strategies, which are goal oriented operations
    used to help in task performance.
  • Frequently children have production deficiencies,
    in which children fail to produce a strategy on
    their own but can do so when instructed.

8
Strategies and Knowledge of Thinking
  • Utilization deficiencies occur when children
    experience little or no benefit from a new
    strategy.
  • Sielger uses the adaptive strategy model to
    explain how there are a variety of strategies
    which children can choose from at a given time,
    but one strategy usually wins and thats the one
    they use. As children get older, more
    sophisticated strategies begin to win.

9
What children know about Thinking
  • Implicit thinking refers unconscious thought,
    which accounts for most of our thinking.
  • Explicit thinking is conscious thinking that we
    are aware of.
  • Childrens understanding of what thinking is
    increases over the preschool years. The are few
    developmental differences, however, that occur in
    implicit cognition during this time.

10
Fuzzy-Trace Theory An Alternative View
  • Proposed by Brainerd and Reyna, this theory
    postulates that people encode experiences on a
    continuum from literal, verbatim traces to fuzzy,
    gistlike traces.
  • A gist is a fuzzy representation of information
    that preserves the central content but few
    precise details.
  • Other alternatives to traditional
    information-processing models emphasize the role
    of inhibition.
  • Inhibition is the ability to prevent ourselves
    from executing some cognitive or behavioral
    response.

11
Development of Attention
  • With age, attention spans, the capacity for
    sustaining attention to a particular activity,
    increase dramatically. This is thought to be a
    result of the increasing myelination of the
    central nervous system because reticular
    formation, the area of the brain responsible for
    attention regulation, is not fully myleniated
    until puberty.

12
Development of Attention
  • Selective attention, the ability to focus on a
    given task while ignoring distracters, develops
    with age. Planning of attention also develops
    with age.
  • ADHD is used to describe children who find it
    very difficult to sustain attention for an
    extended period of time. These children fail to
    develop planned attention strategies.

13
Memory Retraining and Retrieving Information
  • Strategic memory refers to the processes involved
    as one consciously attempts to retain or retrieve
    information.
  • On the other hand, event memory refers to
    long-term memory for events.
  • Autobiographical memory is memory for important
    events that have happened to us.

14
Development of Memory Strategies
  • Mnemonics are effortful techniques used to
    improve memory, including rehearsal,
    organization, and elaboration.
  • Rehearsal is a strategy for remembering that
    involves repeating the items one is trying to
    retain.
  • Semantic organization is another strategy that
    involves grouping or classifying stimuli into
    meaningful (or manageable) clusters that are
    easier to retain.
  • Elaboration involves adding something to (or
    creating meaningful links between) the bits of
    information one is trying to retain.

15
Retrieval Processes
  • Retrieval is a class of strategies aimed at
    getting information out of long-term memory.
  • In free-recall, a recollection occurs that is not
    prompted by specific cues.
  • In cued-recall, a recollection is prompted by a
    specific cue associated with the setting in which
    the recalled event originally occurred.

16
Metamemory
  • Metamemory is an aspect of metacognition that is
    defined by ones knowledge about memory and
    memory processes.
  • This increases with age and contributes to
    developmental and individual differences in
    memory.
  • Older children known more about memory processes,
    and their greater metamemory allows them to
    select the most appropriate strategies for the
    task at hand and to carefully monitor their
    progress.

17
The Development of Event and Autobiographical
Memory
  • Event memory in general, and our memory for
    personal experiences (or autobiographical memory)
    are rarely intentional as strategic memory is.
  • Although infants can remember events that
    happened earlier in time, most of us display
    infantile amnesia.
  • Early autobiographical memory is based on
    scripts. Even very young children organize their
    experiences in terms of scripts, which become
    more detailed with age.

18
Autobiographical Memories
  • These memories improve dramatically during the
    preschool years.
  • Parents play a key role in the growth of
    autobiographical memories by discussing past
    events, providing clues about what information is
    important, and helping children recall their
    experiences.
  • One aspect of autobiographical memory that has
    received much attention is age differences in eye
    witness memory and suggestibility.
  • The accuracy of childrens eyewitness memory
    increases with age.
  • Young children are more susceptible to suggestion
    than older children and are more likely to form
    false memories.

19
Problem Solving
  • Problem solving involves having a goal, obstacles
    to that goal, strategies for overcoming the
    obstacles, and an evaluation of the results.
  • Research by Zelazo and colleagues suggests that
    young children often fail to use a rule even
    though they can demonstrate knowledge of the
    rule.

20
Reasoning
  • Reasoning is a special type of problem solving,
    one that usually requires that one make an
    inference.
  • Analogical reasoning involves using something one
    knows already to help reason about something not
    known yet.
  • Usha Goswami (1996) proposed the relational
    primacy hypothesis, suggesting that analogical
    reasoning is available in infancy.

21
Factors that Affect Childrens Analogical
Reasoning
  • One important factor is knowledge.
  • Their knowledge, or familiarity, with the
    underlying relations used to make the analogy is
    significant.
  • Metacognition plays a role as well.
  • A conscious awareness of the basis on which one
    is solving the problem is integral.

22
Development of Number and Arithmetic Skills
  • The ability to process quantitative information
    is innate.
  • Counting normally begins shortly after children
    begin to talk.
  • By age 4 ½ to 5, children have acquired the
    principle of cardinalitythe knowledge that the
    last word in a counting sequence represents the
    number of items in a set.

23
Early Arithmetic Strategies
  • Childrens earliest arithmetic strategies are
    based on counting, at first out loud, and often
    using props such as fingers.
  • At some point during the early grade-school
    years, childrens solutions to simple arithmetic
    problems become more covert.
  • They no longer count objects on their fingers,
    because they can perform arithmetic operations in
    their heads.

24
Cultural Influences on Mathematics Performance
  • Unschooled children develop arithmetic strategies
    that they apply quite skillfully to the practical
    problems they encounter.
  • East Asian youngsters typically outperform
    American children in certain academic subjects,
    most notably mathematics.
  • This is a result of the structure of their
    languages and instructional practices that aid
    them in retrieving math facts and acquiring
    computational skills.

25
Conclusions
  • The information processing approach has been
    criticized due the lack of attention it pays to
    neurological as well as sociocultural influences.
  • The information processing approach also fails to
    provide an integrative theory of childrens
    intelligence and shows a lack of understanding
    for cognitive diversity.
  • Still the approach has greatly advanced our
    understanding of childrens intellectual growth.
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