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Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist models of information processing... Developed by W. Huitt (1999)
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Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Jan 16, 2016

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Page 1: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Information Processing Approach

Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist models of information processing...

Developed by W. Huitt (1999)

Page 2: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Cognition can be defined as

"the act or process of knowing in the broadest sense; specifically, an intellectual process by which knowledge is gained from perception or ideas" (Webster's Dictionary).

The Cognitive System

Page 3: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

While cognitive psychology is the dominant school of thought today, the information processing approach is the dominant view within this area.

Information Processing Approach

The information processing approach focuses on the study of the structure and function of mental processing within specific contexts, environments, or ecologies.

Page 4: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Information Processing Approach

There are four major theories of how we humans process information:

• Stage approach

• Levels-of-processing theory

• Parallel distributed processing theory

• Connectionistic models

Page 5: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The focus of this model is on how information is stored in memory.

The Stage Theory

The model is based on the work of Atkinson and Shriffin (1968) and proposes that information is processed and stored in three stages:

Atkinson, R., & Shiffrin, R. (1968). Human memory: A proposed system and its control processes. In K Spence & J Spence (Eds.). The psychology of learning and

motivation: Advances in research and theory (Vol. 2). New York: Academic Press.

• Sensory memory• Short-term memory• Long-term memory

Page 6: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Levels-of-Processing Theory

The Levels-of-Processing theory is based on the work of Craik and Lockhart (1972).

Craik, F., & Lockhart, R. (1972). Levels of processing: A framework for memory research. Journal of Verbal Thinking and Verbal Behavior, 11, 671-684. .

The major proposition is all stimuli that activate a sensory receptor cell are permanently stored in memory.

According to these researchers, the issue is not storage, but retrieval.

Page 7: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Rather than hypothesize that information is processed in stages, Craik and Lockhart believe that retrieval of information is based on the amount of elaboration used as information is processed.

The Levels-of-Processing Theory

This is done on a continuum from perception, through attention, to labeling, and finally meaning.

Page 8: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The parallel-distributed processing model states that information is processed simultaneously by several different parts of the memory system, rather than sequentially as hypothesized by Atkinson-Shiffrin.

Parallel Distributed Processing Theory

The stage-theory model discussed in this course differs slightly from that first proposed by Atkinson and Shriffin in order to incorporate this principle.

Page 9: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Connectionistic Theory

The connectionistic model proposed by Rumelhart and McClelland (1986) extends the parallel-distributed processing model.

Rumelhart, D., & McClelland, J. (Eds.). (1986). Parallel distributed processing: Explorations in the microstructure of cognition. Cambridge,

MA: MIT Press.

This model emphasizes the fact that information is stored in multiple locations throughout the brain in the form of networks of connections.

Page 10: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

Connectionistic Theory

It is also consistent with the levels-of-processing approach in that the more connections to a single idea or concept (i.e., the more extensively elaboration is used), the more likely it is to be remembered.

It is one of the dominant forms of current research in cognitive psychology and is consistent with the most recent brain research.

Page 11: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

While there is much disagreement among the various schools of thought related to how human beings process information, there are a few general principles about which almost all researchers agree:

Page 12: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Limited capacity assumption

The amount of information that can be actively processed by the system at a given point in time is constrained in some very important ways.

Page 13: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Limited capacity assumption

Bottlenecks, or restrictions in the flow and processing of information, occur at very specific points.

Page 14: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Control mechanism

Required to oversee the encoding, transformation, processing, storage, retrieval and utilization of information.

Page 15: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Control mechanism

Not all of the processing capacity of the system is available; an executive function that oversees this process will use up some of this capability.

Page 16: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Control mechanism

When one is learning a new task or is confronted with a new environment, the executive function requires more processing power than when one is doing a routine task or is in a familiar environment.

Page 17: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Two-way flow of information

As we try to make sense of the world around us, we constantly use information that we

• gather through the senses (often referred to as bottom-up processing)

Page 18: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Two-way flow of information

As we try to make sense of the world around us, we constantly use information that we

• information we have stored in memory (often called top-down processing)

Page 19: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Two-way flow of information

This is a dynamic process that we use to construct meaning about our environment and our relations to it.

Page 20: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Two-way flow of information

This principle is somewhat analogous to the difference between

• inductive reasoning

• deductive reasoning

OR

Page 21: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Two-way flow of information

This principle is somewhat analogous to the difference between

• information we derive from the senses

• information generated by our imaginations

Page 22: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Genetic preparation

A human infant is more likely to look at a human face than any other stimulus.

Language development is similar in all human infants.

Page 23: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Information Processing Approach

Genetic preparation

The human organism has been genetically prepared to process and organize information in specific ways.

Page 24: Information Processing Approach Define cognition and differentiate among the stage, levels-of-processing, parallel distributed processing, and connectionist.

The Stage Theory

We will focus on the stage theory in this course as work has been done to identify how to apply it to classroom and academic learning.