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Title: Myers PSYCHOLOGY


1
Myers PSYCHOLOGY
  • Chapter 10
  • Thinking and Language
  • Mr. Bandy AP Psychology
  • Blue Valley West
  • Spring 08

2
Thinking
  • Previous chapters explained how we receive,
    perceive, store, and retrieve information. Now
    we consider how our cognitive systems uses this
    information. Thinking, or cognition, refers to
    all the mental activities associated with
    processing, understanding, remembering, and
    communicating. Cognitive psychologists study the
    logical and illogical ways in which we create
    concepts, solve problems, make decisions, and
    form judgments.

3
Fact or Fiction
  • We notice evidence that contradicts our beliefs
    more readily than evidence that is consistent
    with them.
  • The letter k appears more often as the third
    letter of an English word than as the first
    letter.
  • In general, people underestimate how much they
    really know.
  • It takes less compelling evidence to change our
    beliefs than it did to create them in the first
    place.
  • The babbling of an infant at 3 months of age
    makes it clear whether the infant is French,
    Korean, or Ethiopian.
  • If not exposed to a language, a group of children
    will make up their own.
  • People who lack our words for shapes and colors
    also seem to perceive these features very
    differently.
  • Only human beings seem capable of insight (the
    sudden realization of a problems solution).
  • Honeybees do a dance to communicate the direction
    and distance of a new food source to other bees.
  • Apes are capable of communicating meaning by
    using symbols.

4
Limits of our Intuition (immediate cognition)
  • A man bought a horse for 60 and sold it for 70.
    Then he bought the same horse back for 80 and
    again sold it for 90. How much money did he
    make in the horse business?

5
Limits of our Intuition
  • In problem solving, we pay attention to only some
    aspects of information and ignore the rest.
  • Only that information to which we are attuned is
    available for processing toward a solution.
  • Answer 20
  • Total amount paid out 140
  • Total amount taken in 160

6
Thinking
  • Cognition
  • mental activity associated with processing,
    understanding, and communicating information
  • Cognitive Psychology
  • the study of these mental activities
  • concept formation
  • problem solving
  • decision making
  • judgement formation
  • study of both logical and illogical thinking

7
Thinking
  • Concept
  • To think about the countless events, objects, and
    people in our world, we organize them into mental
    groupings called concepts
  • mental grouping of similar objects, events, or
    people
  • Cars ball angry chair
  • To simplify further, we organize concepts into
    hierarchies.
  • (Subordinate, Basic, Super-ordinate)
  • We form concepts by developing them into
    prototypes.
  • The more closely something matches our prototype
    of a concept, the more readily we recognize it as
    an example of the concept.

8
Thinking
  • Prototype
  • the best example of a category
  • matching new items to the prototype provides a
    quick and easy method for including items in a
    category (as when comparing feathered creatures
    to a prototypical bird, such as a robin.)
  • What is your prototype you use to determine what
    is
  • Sexual harassment
  • Crime (bullying)

9
Thinking
  • Is putting things into categories rational and
    does it make us smart??
  • Putting people into categories is irrational and
    makes us sexist and racist.
  • If it is so great to think about ducks and
    chairs, cars and balls, why is it so terrible
    when we think about genders and ethnic groups?

10
Problem Solving
  • Algorithm
  • methodical, logical rule or procedure that
    guarantees solving a particular problem
  • contrasts with the usually speedier but also
    more error-prone use of heuristics

11
Problem Solving
  • Heuristic
  • rule-of-thumb strategy that often allows us to
    make judgements and solve problems efficiently
  • usually speedier than algorithms
  • more error-prone than algorithms
  • sometimes were unaware of using heuristics

12
Problem Solving
  • Unscramble
  • S P L O Y O C H Y G
  • Algorithm
  • all 907,208 combinations
  • Heuristic
  • throw out all YY combinations
  • other heuristics?

13
Problem Solving
  • Insight
  • sudden and often novel realization of the
    solution to a problem
  • contrasts with strategy-based solutions
  • Handout jokes and riddles

14
Thinking- Insight
  • Wolfgang Kohlers experiment on insight by a
    chimpanzee

15
Problems with problem solving
  • Fixation
  • inability to see a problem from a new perspective
  • impediment to problem solving
  • Confirmation Bias
  • tendency to search for information that confirms
    ones preconceptions

16
Problems with problem solving
  • Confirmation bias is the tendency to search for
    instances that confirm our beliefs rather than to
    search for evidence that falsifies those beliefs.
    The tendency to look for, prefer, and use
    information that confirms our beliefs and to
    ignore and forget information that disconfirms
    our beliefs is ubiquitous.
  • For the most part, we are unaware of the many
    times we use confirmation bias because we are not
    consciously aware of the way we are accepting or
    rejecting information.
  • List at least one example from the media or
    society in general in which confirmation bias is
    evident.

17
Who should be awarded custody?
  • Imagine that your serve on the jury of an
    only-child sole custody case following a
    relatively messy divorce. The facts of the case
    are complicated by ambiguous economic, social,
    and emotional considerations, and you decide to
    base your decision entirely on the following few
    observations. To which parent would you award
    sole custody of the child? Parent A, who has an
    average income, average health, average working
    hours, a reasonable rapport with the child, and a
    relatively stable social life, or Parent B, who
    has an above-average income, minor health
    problems, lots of work-related travel, a very
    close relationship with the child, and an
    extremely active social life.

18
Who should be denied custody?
  • Imagine that your serve on the jury of an
    only-child sole custody case following a
    relatively messy divorce. The facts of the case
    are complicated by ambiguous economic, social,
    and emotional considerations, and you decide to
    base your decision entirely on the following few
    observations. To which parent would you deny
    custody of the child?
  • Parent A, who has an average income, average
    health, average working hours, a reasonable
    rapport with the child, and a relatively stable
    social life, or
  • Parent B, who has an above-average income, minor
    health problems, lots of work-related travel, a
    very close relationship with the child, and an
    extremely active social life.

19
Confirmation Bias
  • Most participants chose to award custody to
    Parent B
  • When a different group is given the same scenario
    and asked to which parent they would deny
    custody, the majority also selected Parent B.
  • When asked who should be awarded custody, people
    look primarily for positive qualities and pay les
    attention to negative qualities (Parent B).
  • When asked who should be denied custody, people
    look primary for negative qualities and pay less
    attention to positive

20
Confirmation Bias
  • Mind reading People who consult mind readers
    tend to focus only on the things that actually
    fit their personality. They ignore any comments
    that do not apply. In this way, people are able
    to maintain their belief in mind readers.
  • Astrology Astrology charts often list
    personality traits in very general terms, so that
    they apply to many people. Therefore, it is easy
    to find predictions that seem to be true.

21
Confirmation Bias
  • Gambling often justify their habit by
    overestimating the probability of winning. They
    recall the times they won and how much, but seem
    to forget the times they lost and the amount they
    lost.
  • Stereotypes Beliefs that we have about groups
    of people. If you believe that New Yorkers are
    usually rude and pushy, then you will interpret
    everyday interactions, such as encounters on a
    crowded bus, as being ruder and more more
    aggressive in NY than the same actions they they
    are encountered in a small Midwest town.

22
The Matchstick Problem
  • How would you arrange six matches to form four
    equilateral triangles?

23
The Candle-Mounting Problem
  • Using these materials, how would you mount the
    candle on a bulletin board?

24
Thinking
  • Mental Set
  • tendency to approach a problem in a particular
    way
  • especially a way that has been successful in the
    past but may or may not be helpful in solving a
    new problem

25
Demonstrating Mental Sets
  • We are so busy attending to the changes in the
    number of passengers that we dont attend to the
    stops themselves.
  • Some of you will get 3 correct because your set
    had you continually processing passenger totals.
  • It is nearly impossible to get all questions
    correct. We have a limited capacity to store and
    process new information. We tend to use specific
    strategies that have worked for us in the past.

26
Thinking
  • Functional Fixedness
  • tendency to think of things only in terms of
    their usual functions
  • impediment to problem solving

27
The Matchstick Problem
  • Solution to the matchstick problem

28
The Candle-Mounting Problem
  • when shown a box with tools, and getting the
    assignment solve problem with help of what you
    see here'', most people do not see the box that
    contained the tools as a tool to be used for the
    solving of A. They saw the box only as a
    container of the tools

Article on fixedness
29
Heuristics
  • Representativeness Heuristic
  • rule of thumb for judging the likelihood of
    things in terms of how well they seem to
    represent, or match, particular prototypes
  • If something matches our mental representation of
    a category, that fact usually overrides other
    considerations of statistics or logic
  • may lead one to ignore other relevant information

30
Representativeness Heuristic
  • Linda is 31, single, outspoken, and very bright.
    She majored in philosophy in college. As a
    student, she was deeply concerned with
    discrimination and other social issues, and she
    participated in antinuclear demonstrations.
    Which statement is more likely?
  • Linda is a bank teller
  • Linda is a bank teller and active in the feminist
    movement

31
Representativeness Heuristic
  • The probability of any two uncertain events
    occurring together is always less than the odds
    of either happening alone.
  • We judge the likelihood of things in terms of how
    well they seem to represent or match a particular
    prototype.
  • If I meet someone with a laid back attitude and
    long hair, I might assume they are a Californian,
    whereas someone who is very polite but rigid may
    be assumed to be English.
  • If I meet three people from a company and they
    are all aggressive, I will assume that the
    company has an aggressive culture and that most
    other people from that firm will also be
    aggressive.

32
Heuristics
  • Availability Heuristic
  • estimating the likelihood of events based on
    their availability in memory
  • if instances come readily to mind (perhaps
    because of their vividness), we presume such
    events are common
  • Example airplane crash Jaws movie terrorist
    attacks i.e. profiling

33
Which of the following are more frequent causes
of death in the U.S.?
  • I am ____ certain of my answers.
  • All accidents or strokes?
  • Accidents (35.7) vs strokes (57.4)
  • Homicide or diabetes?
  • Homicide (7.1) vs diabetes (25.1)
  • Motor vehicle accident or cancer of the digestive
    system?
  • (15.7) vs (18.9)
  • Drowning or leukemia?
  • 1.1 vs. (7.8)

34
Thinking
  • Overconfidence
  • tendency to be more confident than correct
  • tendency to overestimate the accuracy of ones
    beliefs and judgements
  • 10-6

35
Thinking
  • Framing
  • The same issue presented in two different but
    logically equivalent ways can elicit quite
    different answers
  • suggests that our judgments and decisions may not
    be well reasoned,
  • those who understand the power of framing can use
    it to influence important decisionsfor example,
    by wording survey questions to support or reject
    a particular viewpoint
  • Example What is the best way to market ground
    beef- As 25 fat or 75 lean?

36
Framing A
  • Threatened by a superior enemy force, the general
    faces a dilemma. His intelligence officers say
    his soldiers will be caught in an ambush in which
    600 of them will die unless he leads them to
    safety by one of two available routes.
  • If he takes the first route, 200 soldiers will be
    saved.
  • If he takes the second, theres a 33 chance that
    600 soldiers will be saved and a 66 chance that
    none will be saved. Which route should he take?
  • Which one should you choose Route 1 or Route 2

37
Framing B
  • Threatened by a superior enemy force, the general
    faces a dilemma. His intelligence officers say
    his soldiers will be caught in an ambush in which
    600 of them will die unless he leads them to
    safety by one of two available routes.
  • If he takes the first route, 400 soldiers will
    die.
  • If he takes the second, theres a 33 chance that
    no soldiers will die and a 66 chance that 600
    will die. Which route should he take?
  • Which one should you choose Route 1 or Route 2

38
Framing
  • People who receive A will prefer route 1
  • 200 soldiers will be saved
  • People who receive B will prefer route 2.
  • If he takes the second, theres a 1/3rd chance
    that no soldiers will die and a two-thirds chance
    that 600 will die. Which route should he take?
  • Even though they are posing the same question.
  • 200 soldiers will be saved (A) or 400 soldiers
    will die (B)
  • one-third chance that 600 soldiers will be saved
    and a two-thirds chance that none will be saved
    (A) or
  • theres a one-third chance that no soldiers will
    die (B) and two-thirds chance that 600 will
    die(B)

39
Thinking
  • Belief Bias
  • the tendency for ones preexisting beliefs to
    distort logical reasoning
  • sometimes by making invalid conclusions seem
    valid, or valid conclusions seem invalid
  • Belief Perseverance (aka Mr. Rost phenomenon)
  • clinging to ones initial conceptions after the
    basis on which they were formed has been
    discredited

40
Artificial Intelligence
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • designing and programming computer systems
  • to do intelligent things
  • to simulate human thought processes
  • intuitive reasoning
  • learning
  • understanding language

41
Artificial Intelligence
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • includes practical applications
  • chess playing
  • industrial robots
  • expert systems
  • efforts to model human thinking inspired by our
    current understanding of how the brain works

42
Artificial Intelligence
  • Computer Neural Networks
  • computer circuits that mimic the brains
    interconnected neural cells
  • performing tasks
  • learning to recognize visual patterns
  • learning to recognize smells

43
Language
  • Language
  • our spoken, written, or gestured works and the
    way we combine them to communicate meaning
  • Phoneme
  • in a spoken language, the smallest distinctive
    sound unit changes produce changes in meaning
  • 42 basic phonemes in English (869 in human
    language)
  • Bat b a t 3 phonemes, add an s 4
    phonemes
  • Produce difficulty in learning other languages
  • No r in Japanese languageroar produces problems

44
Language
  • Morpheme
  • in a language, the smallest unit that carries
    meaning (that adds to a words meaning)
  • may be a word or a part of a word (such as a
    prefix)
  • Grammar
  • a system of rules in a language that enables us
    to communicate with and understand others

45
Morpheme
  • Unladylike
  • The word unladylike consists of three morphemes
    and four syllables.
  • Morpheme breaks
  • un- 'not'
  • lady '(well behaved) female adult human'
  • -like 'having the characteristics of'
  • None of these morphemes can be broken up any more
    without losing all sense of meaning. Lady cannot
    be broken up into "la" and "dy," even though "la"
    and "dy" are separate syllables. Note that each
    syllable has no meaning on its own.

46
Morpheme
  • Dogs
  • The word dogs consists of two morphemes and one
    syllable
  • dog, and
  • -s, a plural marker on nouns
  • Note that a morpheme like "-s" can just be a
    single phoneme and does not have to be a whole
    syllable.
  • Technique
  • The word technique consists of only one morpheme
    having two syllables.
  • Even though the word has two syllables, it is a
    single morpheme because it cannot be broken down
    into smaller meaningful parts.

47
Language
  • Semantics
  • the set of rules by which we derive meaning from
    morphemes, words, and sentences in a given
    language
  • also, the study of meaning
  • Allows us to make the distinction between
  • the truck hit Kyla we would say this if we
    say the accident
  • Kyla was hit by the truck how we would
    comment when asked why Kyla wasnt here in class

48
Syntax
  • the rules for combining words into grammatically
    sensible sentences in a given language
  • Appropriate syntax is important in
    understanding
  • John kidnapped the boy,
  • John, the kidnapped boy
  • The boy kidnapped John

49
Language
  • We are all born to recognize speech sounds from
    all the worlds languages

50
Language
  • Babbling Stage
  • beginning at 3 to 4 months
  • the stage of speech development in which the
    infant spontaneously utters various sounds at
    first unrelated to the household language
  • One-Word Stage
  • from about age 1 to 2
  • the stage in speech development during which a
    child speaks mostly in single words

51
Language
  • Two-Word Stage
  • beginning about age 2
  • the stage in speech development during which a
    child speaks mostly two-word statements
  • Telegraphic Speech
  • early speech stage in which the child speaks like
    a telegram go car using mostly nouns and
    verbs and omitting auxiliary words

52
Language
53
Language
  • Genes design the mechanisms for a language, and
    experience fills them as it modifies the brain

54
Language
55
How do we do it??
  • Skinner
  • Assocaition, imitation, reinforcement
  • Learn to talk in similar ways in which pigeons
    peck.
  • Chomsky
  • Language is inborn
  • Acquire untaught words and grammar too quickly
  • Generate many sentences they have never heard of.
  • Use morphemes in predictable order
  • It just happens

56
Language
  • New language learning gets harder with age

57
Language
  • Linguistic Relativity
  • Whorfs hypothesis that language determines the
    way we think
  • People think differently in different languages.

58
Language
  • The straight-line part of the dance points in the
    direction of a nectar source, relative to the sun

59
Do animals communicate?
  • Yes
  • Come up with arguments that would lend support
    for this statement.
  • No
  • Come up with arguments that would lend support
    for this statement.
  • Keep in mind the following videos
  • Segment 19 If Only They Could Talk
  • Segment 20 -- Who Needs Words, Anyway?
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