Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion Section-

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Ψ Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion Section-

description

Ψ. Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion Section-. Cognitive functions. Perception. Emotion Motivation Action. Attention. Memory. Memory. Imagery. Categorization. Decision-making. Reasoning, problem-solving. Language. Full plate - again. Farewell to Memory - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion Section-

Page 1: Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion Section-

ΨΨCognitive Psychology

Spring 2005

-Discussion Section-

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Cognitive functions• Perception

• Memory• Attention

• Decision-making• Reasoning, problem-solving

• Imagery

• Language

Emotion

Motivation

Action• Memory

Categorization

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Full plate - again

• Farewell to Memory• Deep end of categorization: Basis, Implications• Williams Syndrome• Questionnaires• Happiness• Conundrum

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Next time

• Reasoning & Decision Making

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Farewell to Memory

DH

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Categorization

Earl Miller

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Visual Areas in the Macaque

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Categorization

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Categorization

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Categorization

Nikos Logothetis

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Implications

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Implications

But it can be controlled – Psychological Science (2005)

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Williams SyndromeSymptoms:

Cognitive:

Mental retardation

Poor learning abilities

Particularly poor drawing abilities

Social:

Normal, but overly friendly. Trusting strangers.

Interests:

Strong affinity for music, language

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Williams Syndrome

Prevalence: 1 in 20,000 births. Rather rare

Etiology: Genetically determined. Missing material on Chromosome #7. Due to random mutation.

Theoretical significance: Basically the „opposite“ of Autism (which is much more common).

Cure and treatments: None

Outlook: Stable. Yet shortened life-expectancy.

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FOP

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FOP

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FOP

Symptoms:

Wounded tissue (like muscles) is not replaced by that tissue, but by bone-like structures.

As the disease progresses, this ossification becomes increasingly painful and effectively paralyzes the person.

Fibrodys plasia ossificans progressiva

=Disease where one progressively ossifies, meaning: Turning into stone.

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FOP

Prevalence: 1 in 2,000,000 births. Extremely rare

Etiology: Genetic, but Unknown.

Mechanism: Unknown.

Cure and treatments: None

Outlook: Progressive Paralysis, eventually fatal

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

Autism 1:500

Williams Syndrome 1:20,000

FOP 1:2,000,000

Depression 1:5

Schizophrenia 1:100

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

Depression

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

Schizophrenia

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

Autism

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

Williams Syndrome

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Lifetime Prevalence Ratios

FOP

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How the questions shape the answers

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Some data

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Happiness

• Definition?

• Goal?

• Subjective Well Being (SWB)

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Lottery Winners & Quadruplegics

Big but singular events don’t make a difference in happiness in the long term.

• Explained by Set-Point theory

• Can’t adapt to small but continuous bad or good things.

• Mix: Unemployment. No full Adaptation.

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Income + Happiness in the US (Scitovski, 1985)

Year Very happy Fairly happy Not v happy Other

1946 39% 50% 10% 1%

1947 42% 47% 10% 1%

1948 43% 44% 11% 2%

1952 47% 43% 9% 1%

1956 53% 41% 5% 1%

1957 53% 43% 3% 1%

1963 47% 48% 5% 1%

1966 49% 46% 4% 2%

1970 43% 48% 6% 3%

*1946 - 1970 income rose by 62%.

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Income

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Stability

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Culture/Climate

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Social Life

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Conundrum

May 27th, 2005

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What to do?

• Cancel

• Cancel and go to other TAs?

• Re-schedule

• Other?