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Thinking, Language, and Intelligence

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Thinking, Language, and Intelligence Shoe Repair Jerri repairs shoes for a local shoe store. Currently, she has four pairs, each from a different customer, all of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Thinking, Language, and Intelligence


1
Thinking, Language, and Intelligence
2
Cognitive Psychology
3
Cognitive Psychology
  • study of mental processes by which people process
    and remember info, develop language, solve
    problems, and think.

4
  • Cognition - Mental activities involved in
    acquiring, retaining, and using knowledge

5
  • Thinking the manipulation of mental symbols in
    order to draw inferences and conclusions

6
Shoe Repair
  • Jerri repairs shoes for a local shoe store.
    Currently, she has four pairs, each from a
    different customer, all of which need some work
    done on them. Can you link up each person with
    the color and type of shoe that he or she owns
    and the type of repair that Jerri is doing?

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  • 1. The sandals have worn soles that need
    replacing.
  • 2. Lenore owns the pumps, which arent brown.
  • 3. Dwayne owns the maroon shoes
  • 4. Marias shoes have either a broken heel or a
    split instep.
  • 5. A man owns the loafers.
  • 6. The shoes that have a hole in the toe (which
    arent Ralphs and arent the pumps).
  • 7. the boots are tan.
  • 8. The black shoes dont have a split instep.

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  • Mental Image mental representation of objects
    or events that are not physically present

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Using Imagery
Rotate pairs of images of the patterns to the
left in your mind to make them match. Do the
drawings in each pair represent the same object,
or are they different objects?
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  • Concepts - Mental categories we have formed to
    group objects, events, or situations that share
    similar features or characteristics.

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  • concept a mental grouping of similar objects,
    events, ideas, or people
  • Acquired though everyday experiences and usually
    have fuzzy boundaries

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  • Formal Concept - Mental category formed by
    learning the rules or features that define it.

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  • Prototype - The best or most typical, instance
    of a particular concept

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Story problem
  • An old money-lender offered to cancel a
    merchants debt and keep him from going to prison
    if the merchant would give the money-lender his
    lovely daughter. Horrified yet desperate, the
    merchant and his daughter agreed to let
    Providence decide. The money-lender said he would
    put a black pebble and a white pebble in a bag
    and the girl would draw one. The white pebble
    would cancel the debt and leave her free. The
    black one would make her the money-lenders,
    although the debt would be canceled. If she
    refused to pick, her father would go to prison.
    From the pebble-strewn path they were standing
    on, the money-lender picked two pebbles and
    quickly put them in the bag, but the girl saw he
    had picked up two black ones. What would you
    have done if you were the girl to play the
    money-lenders game and win.

16
Kinds of Thinking
People think in several ways ?
  • Directed thinking is a systematic and logical
    attempt to reach a specific goal, such as the
    solution to a problem. ?
  • Nondirected thinking (or divergent thinking),
    consists of a free flow of thoughts with no
    particular plan and depends more on images. ?

A third type of thinking is metacognition, or
thinking about thinking.
metacognition the awareness of ones own
cognitive process
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Deductive Reasoning
  • Reasoning from the general to the specific, or
    drawing particular conclusions from general
    principles
  • In deductive reasoning, the conclusion is true if
    the premises are true.
  • A premise is an idea or statement that provides
    the basic info that allows us to draw conclusions

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Algorithms
  • a step-by-step procedure to solve a problem that
    always results in the correct answer
  • EX formula for area of a circle
  • Not always practical for solving problems

20
Inductive Reasoning
  • Reason from individual cases or particular facts
    to reach a general conclusion
  • More simply, induction is what you do when you
    arrive at a conclusion on the basis of some
    evidence EX detective work

21
Heuristic
  • a general rule of thumb to reduce the number of
    possible solutions to a problem

22
Availability Heuristic
  • strategy in which the likelihood of an event is
    estimated on the basis of how readily available
    other instances of the event are in memory.

23
Representative Heuristics
  • Strategy in which the likelihood of an event is
    estimated by comparing how similar it is to our
    prototype of the event.
  • Ex. If I meet someone with a laid back attitude
    and long hair, I might assume they are
    Californian, where as someone who is very polite
    but rigid may be assumed English.

24
Trial and Error
  • Involves trying something, and if that doesnt
    work trying something else until you solve the
    problem
  • Useful if there are a limited number of possible
    solutions

25
Difference Reduction
  • Problem-solving method that involves reducing the
    difference between the present situation and the
    desired one

26
Analogies
  • An analogy is a similarity between two or more
    items, events or situations.
  • Ex. If you observe that you do well on a test
    for one class, you may try that technique again
    next time you have a test, even if the next test
    is in a different class.

27
Working Backward
  • In working backward, however, the problem solver
    starts by examining the final goal, then works
    back from the final goal to the present position
    to determine the best course of action.

28
  • Imagine that you are a doctor. One of your
    patients has a stomach tumor that must be
    destroyed if the patient is to live. Certain
    rays will destroy the tumor if they are intense
    enough. To reach the tumor, however, the rays
    need to pass through the healthy tissue that
    surrounds it, and at the intensity needed to
    destroy the tumor, the rays will also destroy the
    healthy tissue. How can you use the rays to
    destroy the tumor without damaging the healthy
    tissue?

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Insight
  • When we suddenly realize the solution to a
    problem
  • Rarely works without a lot of previous effort

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Incubation effect
  • When we arrive at the solution to a problem when
    we have not even been consciously working on the
    problem.

33
Fixation
  • The inability to see a problem from a new
    perspective and impediment to problem solving

34
Matchstick Problem
  • How would you arrange six matches to form four
    equilateral triangles.

35
  • To solve this problem you must break the fixation
    of limiting your considerations to
    two-dimensional solutions.

36
Mental Set
  • tendency to respond to a new problem with an
    approach that was successfully used with similar
    problems.

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Functional Fixedness
  • tendency to think of an object as being useful
    only for the function that the object is usually
    used for.

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Creativity and Problem Solving
  • Convergent Thinking thought is limited to
    available facts, and one tries to narrow ones
    thinking to find the single best solution
  • Divergent Thinking one associates more freely
    to the various elements of a problem. One
    follows leads that run in various directions
    perhaps one of them will lead to the solution
    unexpectedly. Thinking outside the box

42
Connect the dots with four straight lines without
lifting your pencil from the paper
  • . . .
  • . . .
  • . . .

43
Language
  • the communication of ideas through symbols that
    are arranged according to rules of grammar

44
Basic Elements of Language
  • Phonemes - basic sounds of language
  • In a spoken language, the smallest distinctive
    sound.
  • Morphemes basic units of meaning
  • In a language, the smallest unit that carries
    meaning may be a word or a part of a word
  • Syntax - way in which words are arranged to make
    phrases and sentences

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Semantics
  • A set of rules by which we derive meaning from
    words, the study of meaning

47
Stages of Language Development
  • Crying, Cooing, and Babbling - not considered
    true language because they do not use symbols
    with specific meanings. However, it is effective
    at getting attention of caregivers.

48
  • 2. Words, Words, Words the beginning of true
    language, kids start to use words. Mostly nouns,
  • Often they extend the meanings of words to refer
    to things for which they do not have words. This
    behavior is called overextension

49
  • 3. Development of Grammar - The first things
    children say are usually brief, but they have the
    meanings of sentences. That is, these utterances
    have a grammar.
  • Even one word can express a complete thought,
    such as Sit!
  • As they approach their second birthday, most
    children begin to use two-word sentences.

50
How Do We Learn Language?
  • Hereditary Influences
  • Language Acquisition Device (LAD)
  • Noam Chomsky among other psychologist believe
    that people have a natural tendency to acquire
    language. Chomsky refers to this tendency as
    Language Acquisition Device, Humans have it
    animals do not.

51
  • Environmental Influences - Learning theorists
    claim that language learning is similar to other
    forms of learned behavior. Children learn
    language, at least in part, by observing and
    imitating other people.

52
  • Bilingualism speaking two languages
  • Many people throughout the world speak two or
    more languages
  • Today most psychologists believe that it is good
    for childrens cognitive development to be
    bilingual.

53
Thinking without language
  • Ex. Turn on the hot water
  • Thinking in images
  • If I have a big box with three boxes inside of
    that one box then three boxes in each of those
    three boxes and three boxes in each of those
    boxes how many total boxes are there.

54
Animals and language
  • Can animals really use language?

55
Charles Spearman
  • Believed that intelligence is composed of a
    general ability, which is responsible for
    performance on tests of intelligence and ability.

56
Howard Gardner
  • Believes that mental abilities are independent of
    one another and can not be defined by one single
    measure but by Multiple intelligences, which are
    all equally important

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Alfred Binet (1857-1911)
  • Realized brighter children performed like older
    children

60
  • Mental age- Childs current ability compared to
    other children of different ages
  • Chronological age- numeric age

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Other Intelligence tests
  • WAIS- Designed for adults
  • Achievement Tests- ex TAKS
  • Aptitude tests- ex. SAT, ACT, or GRE

64
Components of a Good Test
  • Standardization- test must be given to a large
    number of subjects that are representative of the
    group under uniform conditions.
  • Reliability- gives the same results over and over
    again
  • Validity- testing whether or not a test measures
    what it is intended to measure

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