Sunday, May 17, 2015

Unit V and VI: States of Consciousness:

States of Consciousness:
Sleep: sleep is the state of consciousness. We are less aware of our surroundings

Biological Rhythms:

Annual Cycles: seasonal variations (bears hibernation, seasonal affective disorder)
28 day cycles: menstrual cycle
24 hour cycle: our circadian rhythm
90: minute cycle: sleep cycles

Circadian rhythm
- our 24 hour biological clock
- our body temperature and awareness changes throughout the day
- it is best to take a test or study during your circadian peaks


Sleep Stages:
- there are 5 identified stages of sleep
- it takes about 90-100 minutes to pass through 5 stages
- the brains waves will change according to the sleep stage you are in
- the first four stages are known as NERM sleep
- the fifth stage is called REM sleep






Unit V and VI: Intelligence

Intelligence:
Intelligence- the ability to learn from experience solve problems and use knowledge to adapt to new situations. Is socially constructed thus can be culturally specific.
Is intelligence one thing it several different abilities? To find out scientist use factor analysis: a statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items on a test.
Charles Spearman used FA to discovery his g or (general intelligence)
Multiple Intelligence: Howard Gardner disagreed with Spearmans g and instead came up with the concept of multiple intelligence. He came up with the idea by studying savants ( a condition where a person has limited mental ability but I'd exceptional in one area.
Gardeners Multiple Intelligence: visual/ spatial, verbal and linguistic, logical/mathematical, bodily/ kinesthetically, musical/rhythmic, interpersonal, intrapersonal, natural.
Sternbergs three aspects of Intelligence: Gardner simplified:
Analytical: academic problem solving
Creative: generating novel ideas
Practical: required for everyday tasks where multiple solutions exist.
Emotional Intelligence: first called social intelligence. The ability to perceive, express, understand, and regulate emotions. Some studies show EQ to be a greater predictor for future success than IQ.
Brain Size and Intelligence: is there a link?: small +.15 correlation between head size and intelligence scores(relative to body size) using an MRI we found +.44 correlation with brain size and IQ score.
Brian Function And Intelligence: higher performing brains use less active than lower performing brains( use less glucose). Neurological speed is also a bit quicker.
How do we asses intelligence?: Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon set out to figure out a concept called a mental age (what a person of a particular age should know) they discovered that by discovering someone's mental age they can predict future performance. Hoped they could use test to help children not label them.
Terman and his IQ test: IQ=mental age/chronological age x 100.
Modern Tests of mental abilities: Wechasler adult intelligence scale(WAIS): consists of 11 subtests and cues us on UK strengths by using factor analysis.
Aptitude vs achievement tests: aptitude a test designed to predict a persons future performance. The ability for that person to learn
Achievement: a test designed to asses what a person has learned.
How do we construct intelligence tests? Tests must be - standardized -reliable - valid
Standardization; the test must be protested to a representative sample of people and form a normal distribution or bell curve. Flynn Effect: intelligence test performance has Been rising.
Reliability: the extent which a test yields consistent results over time . Spilt halves it test retest method.
Validity: the extent to which a test measures what it is supposed to measure
Content validity: does the tests sample a behavior of interest. Predictive Validity: does the test predict future behavior.
Group Differences in intelligence test scores: the bell curve is different for whites and blacks. Why? Nature vs Nurture
Test Bias: tests do discriminate but some argue that there sole purpose is to discriminate. We have to look at the type of discrimination.












Unit V and VI: Thinking:

Thinking:
Cognition: another term for thinking, knowing, and remembering.
In order to think about the world, we form CONCEPTS- A mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people.
-Concepts similar to Piagets idea of Schemas.
We base our concepts on Prototypes- A mental image or best example of a category.
-If a new object is similar to our prototype we are better able to recognize it.
We solve problems on TRIAL AND ERROR.
Algorithms: a methodical, logical rule, or procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem.
Heuristics: a rule of thumb strategy that often allows us to make judgements and solve problems efficiently. A short cut.
Insight: a sudden and often novel realization of the solution to a problem. No real strategy involved.

Obstacles to problem solving:
Confirmation Bias: a tendency to search for information that confirms ones preconceptions. Match Problem: fixation: the inability to see a problem from a new prospective.
The jug problem: B-A-2C = desires amount of water.
Mental Set: a tendency to approach a problem in a particular way especially if it has worked in the past. May or may not be a good thing.
Functional fixedness: the tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions.




Types of Heuristics:
Representativesness Heuristics: a rule of thumb for judging the likelihood of things in terms of how well they match our prototype. Can cause us to ignore important information.
Availability Heuristic: estimating the likelihood of events based on their availability in our memory. If it comes to mind easily we presume it is common.

Overconfidence: the tendency to be more confident than correct. To overestimate the accuracy of your beliefs and judgements.
Framing: the way an issued is posed. It can have drastic effects on your decisions and judgments.
Belief Bias: 1. democrats support free speech. The tendency for ones preexisting beliefs to distort logical reasoning.
2. Dictators are not democrats. Sometimes making invalid conclusions valid or vise versa.
Belief Perservance: clinging to your initial conceptions after the basis on which they were formed has been discredited.






Unit V & VI: Memory


Memory:
Memory: The persistence of learning over time through the process of storage and retrieval of information
Three Memory Concepts:
1. Encoding: The processing of information into the memory system
2. Storage: The retention of material over time.
3. Retrieval: the process of getting the information our of memory storage.


Recall: retrieve information from your memory (a fill in the blank test)
Recognition: must identify the target from possible targets (multiple choice)
Flash bowl memory: a clear moment of an emotionally significant moment or event

Three Memory Types:
·         Sensory memory: the immediate initial recording of sensory information. It is stored for just an instant and most of the information goes unprocessed.
·         Short term memory: holds a few items briefly. If it doesn't stay in shirt term it goes to long term or it is forgotten. Also known as the working memory
1. Audio
2. Visual
3. Integration of audio and visual

·         Long term memory: permanent and limitless store house of memory.

Encoding
Two ways to encode
1. Automatic processing:    unconscious encoding of incidental information.
-You encode space, time and word meaning without effort
-Things can become automatics with practice
- for example if I tell you that you are jerk

2: Effortful Processing: encoding that re quotes attention and conscious effort
- rehearsal is the most common Effortful processing technique

v  The next-in-line effect: we seldom remember what the person has just said or done if we are next
v  Information minutes before sleep is seldom remembered; in the hour before sleep, well remembered
v  Tales info played while asleep is registered by ears, but we do not remember it.

Spacing effect:  we encode better when we study or practice over time

Serial positioning effect: our tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list

Types of encoding:
- Semantic encoding: the encoding of meaning, like the meaning of the word
- Acoustic Encoding: the encoding of sound, especially the sounds of words
-Visual encoding: the encoding of picture images


Self- reference effect: the idea that we remember things (like adjectives) when they are used to describe ourselves

Tricks to encoding
-          use imagery:
Devices use imagery. Like my "peg word" system
Chunking: Organizing items into familiar manageable units

Storage- How we retain the information we encode

Iconic memory: a momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli a photograph like way kitty lashing only about a second
Echoic memory for auditory stimuli. If you are not paying attention to someone you can still recall theasg few words said in the past three or four seconds

Long term Potentiation: Long lasting: enhancement in signal transmission between two neurons that results from stimulating them synchronously

Stress and Memory
Deals with The hippocampus
- dangerous to your hippocampus disrupts our memory
- Left= verbal
- Right= Visual and Locations

Types of Retrieval Failure: the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information

Retroactive interference: the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information

Unit V: Sensation and Perception:

Unit V & VI Notes:
Unit V: Sensation and Perception: 

Sensation: your window to the world.
Bottom up Processing: analysis that begins with the sense receptors and works up to the brains integration of sensory information.
Top down Processing: information processing guided by higher level mental processes. As when we construct perceptions drawing on our experiences and expectations.

Perception: interpreting what comes in your window. the process of organizing and interpreting information. Enabling us to recognize meaningful objects and events.
Visual Capture: the tendency for vision to dominate the other senses.
Gestalt Psychology: (gestalt means an organized whole) these psychologists emphasize our tendency to integrate pieces of information into meaningful wholes.
Gestalt Philosophy: the whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
Figure Ground Relationships: the organization of the visual field into objects (figures) that stand out from their surroundings(ground).
Groupings: the perceptual tendency to organize stimuli into groups that we understand.
1. Proximity- group nearby figures together.
2. Similarity- group items that are similar together.
3. Continuity- continuos patterns
4. Connectedness- uniform and linked together.
Depth Perception: the ability to see objects in three dimensions litho ugh the images that strike the retina are two dimensional. Allows us to judge distance.
How do we transfer two dimensional objects to three dimensional objects:
Binocular Cues: depth cues that depend on two eyes.
Monocular Cues; depth cues that depend on one eye.

Retinal Disparity: a binocular cue for seeing depth. The closer an object comes to you the greater the disparity is between the two images.  

Interposition: if something is blocking our view, we perceived it as closer.
Relative Size: I we know that two objects are similar in size the one that looks smaller is farther away.
Relative Clarity: we assume hazy objects are farther away.
Texture Gradient: the coarser it looks the closer it is.
Relative Height: things higher in our field of vision, they look farther away.
Relative Motion; things that are closer appear to move more quickly.
Liner Perspective: parallel lines seem to converge with distance.
Light and Shadow: dimmer objects appear farther away because they reflect less light.

Phi Phenomenon: an illusion of movement created when two or more adjacent lights blink on and off in succession.
Perceptual Consistency: perceiving objects as unchanging even as illumination and retinal images changes.

Transduction: transforming signals into neural impulses. Information goes from the retna to the thalamus then to various areas in the brain.

Sensory Adaptation: decreased responsiveness to stimuli due to constant stimulation.
Sensory interaction: the principle that one sense may influence another.

Taste and smell are chemical senses:
Papillae: those bumps on your tongue. Helps you grip food while your teeth are chewing. They contain your taste buds.

Sweet: it is sensed when our sensitive taste buds come into contact with sugar. Found on the tip of your tongue.
Salty: sensed when our salty taste buds come in contact with salt.
Sour: sensed when our sour taste buds come in contact with an acid
Bitter: sensed when our bitter taste buds come in contact with alkaline chemical. Base of the tongue.
Spicy: Sensed when the nerve receptors in our mouth come into contact sigh a chemical that irritates them.

Cocktail Party Phenomenon: the cocktail party effect describes the ability to focus ones listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conservations and background noises, ignoring other conservations. Form of selective attempt.

Energy vs. Chemical Senses:

Vision: our most dominating sense. Visual capture.

Phase One: gathering light
The height of a wave (brightness) gives us its intensity.
The length of the wave (color) gives us its hue.
The longer the wave the more red
The shorter the wavelength the more violent.

Phase Two: getting the light in the eye:

Phase Four: in the brain:
Goes to visual cortex located in the occipital love of the cerebral cortex. Features detectors. Parallel Processing

Color Vision:
1. Trichromatic Theory: three types of cones. Red. Blue. Green.
These three types of cones can make millions of combinations of colors. Does not explain afterimage a or colorblindness well.
2. Opponent Processing Theory: the sensory receptors come in pairs. Red and green. Yellow and blue. Black and white. If one color is stimulated, the other is inhibited.

Hearings:
our auditory sense.
We hear sound waves. The height of the wave gives us the amplitude of the sound.
The frequency of the waves gives us the pitch of the sound

Transduction in the ear: sound waves hit the eardrum then anvil and then hammer then stirrup then oval window.
Then the cochlea vibrates.
The cochlea is lined with the mucus called the basilar membrane.
In basilar membrane there are hair cells.
When hair cells vibrate they turn vibrations into neural impulses which are called organ of Corti.
Sent then to thalamus up auditory nerve.

Pitch theories:
Place Theory: different hairs vibrate in the cochlea when they feel different pitches. So some hairs vibrate when they hear high and other vibrate when they hear low pitches.
Frequency Theory: all the hairs vibrate but at different speeds.

Deafness:
Conduction deafness: something goes wrong with the souf and the vibration on the way to the cochlea. You can replace the bones or get a hearing aid to help.
Nerve (sensorineural) Deafness: the hair cells in he cochlea gets damaged. Loud noises can cause this type of deafness. No way to replace the hair. Cochlea implant is possible.

Frequency: # of complete wavelengths that pass through point at a given time. This determines the pitch of a sound.
Short wavelength= high frequency
Long wavelength= low frequency

Amplitude: how loud a sound is. The higher the crest of the wave is the louder the sound is. Measured in decibels.




Absolute Threshold: the minimum stimulation needed to detect a stimulus 50% of the time.
Difference Threshold: the minimum difference that a person can detect between two stimulus. Also known as Just Noticeable Difference.
Webers Law: the idea that to perceive a difference between two stimuli they must differ by a constant percentage not a constant amount.
Signal Detection Theory: predicts how we detect a stimulus amid other stimuli. Assumes that we do not have an absolute threshold. We detect stuff based on our experiences motivations and fatigue level.
Subliminal Stimulation: below ones absolute threshold for conscious awareness.

Intensity: The amount of energy in a light wave determined but the height of the wave the higher the wave the more intensity.

Parallel Processing: the processing of several aspects of a problem simultaneously (color motion form)

Color Blindness:
caused by: 1. Genetics 2. Exposure to chemicals.

Rods facilitate black and white vision
Cones facilitate color vision.