Survey							
                            
		                
		                * Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
2014/10/9 PURPOSEFUL BEHAVIORISM  Behaviorism only focus on observable behaviors and ignore what is happening in the brain   But clearly what is happening in the brain is important A new approach, called purposive behaviorism, is proposed by Edward Tolman PSY6015 COGNITIVE LEARNING THEORIES Lecture 5 and 6 – Information processing model PURPOSEFUL BEHAVIORISM  Learning is an internal rather than external change   Performance improved without reinforcement Reinforcement influences performance rather than learning GESTALT PSYCHOLOGY  Increasingly highlight the significance of perception, learning, and problem solving PURPOSEFUL BEHAVIORISM  Behavior is purposive  Expectations affect behavior  Learning results in an organized body of information COGNITIVISM  General assumptions  Some learning processes may be unique to human beings  Learning involves the formation of mental representations or associations that aren’t necessarily reflected in overt behavior changes  People are actively involved in the learning process  Knowledge is organized 1 2014/10/9 COGNITIVISM   The focus of scientific inquiry must be on objective, systematic observations of people’s behaviors, but behaviors often allow reasonable inferences about unobservable mental processes COGNITIVISM     Let’s try the following experiment   Try to remember the sentences listed on the next page (without copying down!)    Read the page after next to determine whether the sentences on that page appeared before  INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL     INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL Portrayed human learning as how computer processes information INFORMATION PROCESSING MODEL Learning   Acquisition of new information or skills Long-term change in mental representations or associations as a result of experience  Memory  Storage  Encoding      People learn by constructing general ideas, not learn by verbatim How they perceive the stimuli around them How they “put” what they’ve perceived into their memories How they “find” what they’ve learned when they need to use it Etc… IMPORTANT TERMS  The jelly was in the kitchen The ants ate the jelly The ants ate the sweet jelly which was on the table The ants in the kitchen ate the jelly on the table The ants in the kitchen ate the sweet jelly The ants were on the table Focus on how people think about the information they receive from the environment   Testing items The ability to recall previously acquired information The process of “putting” new information in memory The modification humans make when storing new information Involves form changing and simplifying Retrieval  Finding out information previously stored in the memory 2 2014/10/9 SENSORY REGISTER SENSORY REGISTER  The first “store” in the information processing process  Responsible for holding incoming information long enough for it to undergo very preliminary cognitive processing  Examples   Capacity     Forms of storage  Visual and auditory Duration Moving your fingers quickly Catching back after wandering in class    SENSORY REGISTER Very large <1 s for visual memory Around 2 s for verbal memory Quickly decayed or interfered by new information SENSORY REGISTER 8 C 4 D 5 B 2 W G 0 1 P 1 Y 4 G H 9 K 2 M Q 6 8 ATTENTION  Focused cognitive processing of particular aspects of the environment  Cocktail party phenomenon  Limited capacity  Only attended information goes into working memory ATTENTION  Factors affecting attention  Motion  Size  Intensity Novelty Incongruity Social cues Emotions Personal significance      Can be both automatic and conscious   Both capture and maintain attention 3 2014/10/9 WORKING MEMORY  A component of memory where active thinking occurs WORKING MEMORY  Central executive:    Awareness or consciousness of the memory system  Identifies information in the sensory register that warrants attention, saves the info for a longer period of time, and processes it further  WORKING MEMORY Phonological loop   A supervisory system Controls and monitors the flow and use of information throughout the memory system A short-term storage system for words and sounds Visuospatial sketchpad  A short-term storage system for visual and spatial information WORKING MEMORY  How large is the working memory capacity?   What are your working memory capacities?   Try it out yourselves! For an average person: 7±2 Any ways to enhance the capacity?    How do we remember phone numbers? 2948-8829 Chunking   WORKING MEMORY  Duration:   Limited Experiment by Peterson & Peterson (1959) Remember three consonant letters and then immediately asked to count backward by threes  Participants recall consonant after 3 – 18 seconds  Delay 3s 80% accuracy  Delay 18s 10% accuracy Grouping small units into larger ones Can keep 3-5 meaningful units WORKING MEMORY  Control processes:  Organization    Chunking Putting into story  山巔一石一壺酒  Retrieval  Maintenance rehearsal  Repeating information to keep it alive in working memory 4 2014/10/9 IMPLICATIONS  Attention is essential for explicit memory  Include variety in topics and presentation styles  Frequent breaks  Ask questions  Minimize distractions  Seat students near teacher  Monitor students’ behaviors CLASSROOM EXERCISE  Try to explain the following phenomenon IMPLICATIONS  Learners only process limited info at a time   Learners must be selective in their learning    CONSTRUCTION IN STORAGE  Does our memory work like a video recorder? CONSTRUCTION IN STORAGE    e.g., sound waves, light rays, etc  Perception: our interpretation of the environment e.g., by hearing the voice, you know that it is your mother who is speaking  Less than sensation because we cannot possibly interpret all the information in our environment  More than sensation because it has meanings Saccades  Sensation: what we actually receive from the environment    No! In the process of perception, we only retain a small portion of information We need to construct the whole picture in our mind Students write better essays using word processors if their word processing skills are well developed. If not, handwritten essays are better (Roblyer & Doering, 2010). Sensation vs. perception   Students’ writing often improves more rapidly if they are initially allowed to ignore grammar, punctuation, and spelling (McCutcheon, 2000). CONSTRUCTION IN STORAGE  highlight main ideas Individual differences   Break down complicated information into smaller pieces  Jumps in focus 4 to 5 times a second Our visual world should appear jerky and erratic  we “fill in “ the missing parts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bW_zDILeevY   Making assumptions  We would never capture the complete picture of the environment  People always make assumptions based on parts   e.g., you cannot see the whole body of all your classmates in the classroom You assume that all your classmates have legs! 5 2014/10/9 CONSTRUCTION IN STORAGE  Processing ambiguous stimuli CONSTRUCTION IN STORAGE  Characteristics      STORAGE  Storage process     You construct your own story STORAGE  Selection Rehearsal  Storage process    Meaningful learning STORAGE Factors affecting long-term memory storage  Categorize new information into the right “folder” Elaboration Using prior knowledge to embellish on new information and storing the embellished version  Precise elaboration helps recalling  “The fat man read the sign warning about the thin ice” vs.  “The fat man read the sign that was two feet high”  MAIGUWRSENNFLOD  MEANINGFULWORDS  Self-reference effect  Relating new information to oneself significantly enhance learning  Meaningfulness helps  “Does it have big letters?” vs.  “Does it mean the same as __________?” vs.  “Does it describe you?”  Internal organization Rote learning vs. elaborative rehearsal   Words used are changed The focus was on significant events Parts of the story were distorted Tendency to both explain and describe events  Visual imagery STORAGE  Expectations Working memory Prior knowledge Prior knowledge helps encoding new information e.g., people who have been trapped in enclosed areas were frightened when they first saw open area, because things seem to change in sizes!  e.g., geographers tend to learn and remember maps better than other people    Prior misconceptions   Halo vs. Horns effect  More efficient processing, but may result in wrong judgments e.g., how do we see?  Good persons usually do good things, bad person usually do bad things 6 2014/10/9 STORAGE  Factors affecting long-term memory storage    Actually doing something Feedback during enactment helps improving the actions  More likely to engage in meaningful learning when they are explicitly encouraged to do so Need guidance on what is important to learn Helps students organize new materials   Spacing effect: additional learning and practice sessions are typically more effective when they’re spaced out over a period of time   Relate classroom subject matter to familiar concepts and situations Expository organizer and comparative organizer Concept map Automatic processing reduces memory load STORAGE DIFFERENT KINDS OF MEMORY Educational implications  Elaboration is helpful  Visual aids enhance long-term memory Sufficient time for processing Summaries       Questions, discussions, etc review, highlight important points, organize Opportunities for practice Fast learning =/= better learning DIFFERENT KINDS OF MEMORY  More effective when it builds on prior knowledge Development of automaticity     Repetition and review  Educational implications Talking or writing about an experience Enactment    Verbalization   STORAGE Declarative memory  Episodic memory One’s memory of personal life experiences  e.g., remembering your trip to Europe, remembering one of your birthday parties, remembering how you met your significant other, etc.   DIFFERENT KINDS OF MEMORY  Procedural memory   Remembering how to do things e.g., how to ride a bicycle, how to carry out long division Semantic memory  One’s general knowledge of the world independent of personal experiences  e.g., knowing about the number of continents in the world, number of alphabets in English, 8 x 7 = ? 7 2014/10/9 DIFFERENT KINDS OF MEMORY  Explicit memory    ORGANIZATION OF MEMORY  Knowledge that we can easily recall and explain e.g., recalling the multiplication table  Further in the hierarchy, longer time to recall Implicit memory    Knowledge that we can’t consciously recall or explain e.g., telling how to ride a bicycle, producing grammatically correct sentences Recognition tests ORGANIZATION OF MEMORY  Hierarchy CONCEPTS  Memory as a network What is a concept     A mental grouping of objects or events that are similar in some way Concrete concepts: chicken, swim, sky Abstract concepts: psychology, justice, memory Concrete concepts are easier to learn E: What is an uncle? C: An uncle is that he brings you presents at Christmas.  E: What else?  C: An uncle is that he lets you come over to his house.  E: Could I be your uncle?  C: No… because I don’t know you  E: If I got to know you and brought you presents, could I be your uncle?  C: Yes.   CONCEPTS  Positive instance    Negative instance    A non-example of the concept e.g., Flowers are not animals Under-generalization   A particular example of a concept e.g., Birds are animals Unable to recognize all positive instances Over-generalization  Unable to reject all negative instance Trees Flowers CONCEPTS  Animals What do people learn about concepts  Defining features  Correlational features  Irrelevant feature  Examples: concept of a dog  Fish Birds  Insects Mammals Vegetables Water Characteristics that must be present in all positive instances Frequently found in positive instances but aren’t essential Four legs Hairy  Wearing a collar  Bark at strangers  Sleep on the floor   8 2014/10/9 CONCEPTS  What do people learn about concepts  A typical example of the concept Examplers   Numerous examples of a concept e.g., fruit = apple, banana, orange, water melon…… CONCEPTS  How to facilitate concept learning   How do people learn concepts Prototype   CONCEPTS  Statistical learning  Consistently forming hypotheses and test them  Definition SCHEMA AND SCRIPT  Schema: Defining features are salient  More salient than correlational and irrelevant features  Highlighting defining features is important     Definitions facilitate concept learning Numerous and varied positive instances help to illustrate a concept Positive and negative instances are more effective when presented simultaneously   Scripts:      Challenges of conceptual changes  Existing beliefs Consistent with their everyday experiences Integrated into a cohesive whole  Personal or emotional investment  Supported by social environment  Confirmation bias  Fail to see inconsistency between new information and prior beliefs information overload Helping people to focus on their attention on things that are likely to be important Enable people to make sense of incomplete information Can be problematic when it does not match the reality CONCEPTUAL CHANGES  Promoting     Schema of events e.g., visiting the doctor  Reduces  CONCEPTUAL CHANGES A closely connected set of ideas related to a specific object or event e.g., the schema of a classroom      conceptual changes Students can build up on their existing knowledge Determine the misconceptions before teaching Explicit comparisons Induce cognitive dissonance Meaningful context Supportive of conceptual changes Assessment 9 2014/10/9 RETRIEVAL  Getting information out from the memory  Often a conscious process  Long-term memory capacity is unlimited, so complete searching is impossible    A process of spreading activation, with activation flowing through connections within the network of stored information  Organization helps retrieval process Black  suit  work  tired  sleep …..  Encoding  Similar to searching something with a torch at night RETRIEVAL  RETRIEVAL specificity Retrieval is easier when learners engage in thought processes similar to those they previously used when storing info  Anxiety affects retrieval RETRIEVAL – SERIAL POSITION CURVE Serial position effect   Better recall for items at the beginning (primacy effect) and at the end of the list (recency effect) than for items in the middle Reason: Primacy effect: rehearsal  better recall Recency effect: still active in STM  Items in the middle: not enough time for rehearsal and suffer from interference   RETRIEVAL RETRIEVAL  Retrieval    cues   Identical to the information one is trying to retrieve Multiple choices items are providing identity cues  Association cues  Frame      Other retrieval cues – peg-word method Hints of where to find information Identity cues Related to the stimuli being searched Direct you to the relevant parts of your long-term memory Organizational structure Recalling by categories Contextual cues  Testing in a similar context as you have learned the materials helps retrieval 10 2014/10/9 RETRIEVAL  RETRIEVAL Other retrieval cues – first-letter method  Construction   Flashbulb memories  Mammals Amphibian Memories of experiencing or hearing about significant emotion-laden events  Often quite vivid, detailed ones with a seemingly snapshot quality to them  The vividness does not imply accuracy! Reptiles FARM B Birds RETRIEVAL  Construction   FORGETTING in retrieval The way the question is asked already altered the responses  Experiment: watch the same car crashing movie and then estimate the speed of the cars  “About how fast were the cars going when they contacted each other?”  “About how fast were the cars going when they hit each other?”  “About how fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other?”  31.8 vs. 34.0 vs. 40.8 Misinformation effect  Eyewitness testimony is not always accurate  s Fish in retrieval You retrieve the gist and then re-construct the rest People’s retrieval changes from time to time   Reasons      More irrelevant information, takes longer to recall Retrieval-induced forgetting  Inhibit the retrieval of wrong information Repression  Leading questions: “how did the protesters hit the police?” Verbatim information is more likely to decay Decay is hard when the information is of personal relevance Interference and inhibition   for forgetting Decay: information gradually fade away Tend not to remember something painful or emotionally distressing FORGETTING RETRIEVAL AND FORGETTING  Failure  Educational   to retrieve Fail to find out the piece of information in a particular context However, with appropriate retrieval cues, the information can be eventually identified  Construction error  Failure to store or consolidate  Infantile amnesia  Remembering nothing before age 3 Memory may work in implicit forms  Lack of language skills to rehearse?        implications Internal organization helps Earlier retrieval influences later ones Store and retrieve in similar contexts External retrieval cues help Questions help Keep attention Elicit feedback  Understand misconceptions  Construct meanings   Infants can distinguish the songs they have heard in mother’s tummy! 11 2014/10/9 RETRIEVAL AND FORGETTING RETRIEVAL AND FORGETTING  Educational  Educational     implications Bloom’s taxonomies  Cognitive processes: Remember, understand, apply, analyses, evaluate, create  Types of knowledge: Factual, conceptual, procedural, metacognitive Retrieval takes time Classroom assessments affect both storage and retrieval  Assessment format affect how to encode information, encourage review, feedback CLASSROOM EXERCISE  implications Taxonomies of objectives helpful as making students to think about and apply what they have learned In a group of 3-4 people, choose a learning task in any subject (primary or secondary level) you prefer (e.g., carrying out an experiment). Analyze and identify all the memory systems / processes involved. You will be asked to present your analysis at the end of the discussion. RECAP EXERCISES  Write down 4-5 key concepts covered in this topic (with some elaborations) and share with the friend next to you!  1.  2.  3.  4.  5. REFERENCES Eggen, P. D. & Kauchak, D. P. (2014). Educational psychology: Windows on classrooms (9th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.  Ormrod, J. E. (2012). Human learning (6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson.  12