Cognitive Psychology (85-211) : Instructor
Cognitive Psychology (85-211) : Instructor
GENERAL INFORMATION
Instructor:
Charles Kemp
340T Baker Hall, ckemp@cmu.edu
Office Hour: Thursday 1:302:30 or by appointment
TA:
Jungaa Moon
455F Baker Hall, jmmoon@cmu.edu
Office Hour: Tuesday 12:00 1:00 or by appointment
Class Schedule:
Units:
Home Page:
http://www.cmu.edu/blackboard
Textbooks:
COURSE ORGANIZATION
Modules. The course is divided into two units: 1) History & Methods, Perception,
Attention & Memory; 2) Language, Reasoning, and Higher Cognition
Lectures and Reading. The lectures provide the core content of the course, introducing
key theories and research findings. The information covered in lectures is supplemented
by readings from the textbook, articles posted online, and articles included in the
homework assignments. An up-to-date list of the readings for each lecture will be posted
on Blackboard. Not all material in the readings will be covered in the lecture, and vice
versa, so it is important to keep up with both.
There will be a handout distributed at most lectures. Usually the handout is little more
than an outline, and you will need to make your own notes that go beyond the
information mentioned on the handout. Lecture slides and handouts will be available on
the website after each class.
CogLab Experiments. The CogLab experiments will give you the opportunity to try
some classic experiments in cognitive psychology for yourself. The online system will
store your responses, and summary data for the entire class will be discussed in lecture.
Homework assignments. Each assignment will focus on a central theme in cognitive
psychology. Readings for each assignment will be available from the course website.
Wiki. The Course Content page on the Blackboard site includes an interesting links
wiki. Please edit the wiki if you come across links or demos that youd like to share with
the class. Posting to the wiki is optional.
ASSESSMENT
Exams. There will be two in-class exams, one at the end of each unit. Each exam will
involve a mix of multiple choice and short-answer questions, covering material from
lectures and readings (both the textbook and homework readings) and the CogLab
experiments.
Homework. There will be 6 homework assignments, three in each unit. Each assignment
will include a series of short answer questions based on a reading that will be available
online. Homework assignments are due at the end of class on the dates mentioned on the
schedule. Late assignments will be accepted before noon on the following day and will
receive a penalty of 10%.
POLICIES
Quotes from the textbook/readings. Students occasionally answer homework questions
by identifying the most relevant section in the reading and quoting (with attribution) a
large chunk of text. Responding in this way does not qualify as plagiarism but is unlikely
to earn you a good grade. Your responses should reflect your own way of thinking about
the question as a rule of thumb, any direct quote that you choose to include should be at
most a few words long.
Turning in homework assignments. You can turn in homework assignments during
class, on the due date or before. You may also turn in homework before it is due to
Jungaas mailbox in Baker Hall 336D. In addition, once you have printed out your
written copy, you should upload your work to the Blackboard course website. If youre
having trouble submitting your file, try using a different browser before contacting us.
Your electronic submission will give us a permanent copy of your work, which we can
access if your work gets lost or damaged. Note that this electronic submission is a backup
only if you submit an electronic copy but not a hard copy, then your
assignment will not be graded.
Cover sheets will be distributed with each assignment, and your hard copy should include
a completed cover sheet. Since we will distribute your responses among a team of
graders, your submission should be printed single sided and your name should appear on
top of each page. There is a 5% penalty for failing to follow these guidelines.
Turning in experiments. Experiments should be completed online before midnight on
the date mentioned in the schedule.
Feedback and grading queries. We will provide answer keys for each homework
assignment. If you believe that an assignment has received a grade in error, you may
submit an appeal. Please write a cover letter explaining your concern and deliver it to
Jungaa along with the assignment in question. Appeals must be submitted within 72
hours after an assignment is returned. Note that assignments submitted for an appeal will
be regraded in their entirety. As a result, your grade may increase, but may also decrease.
Exams will not be returned but will be available for inspection in Jungaas office.
Cheating and plagiarism. You are responsible for knowing University policies on
cheating and plagiarism, as defined in the CMU student handbook. Unless explicitly told
otherwise, you can discuss homework and readings with others. However, the final
product has to be your own. Not just your own handwriting, but also your own way of
explaining and organizing the ideas. Note that plagiarism includes making superficial
changes (e.g., small additions, deletions, word substitutions, word order changes) to
existing material. The idea is the intellectual property, not the specific format. Cheating
and plagiarism will not be tolerated. If you are caught cheating or plagiarizing, you
may be assigned a failing grade in the class. If you have any questions or concerns
about whether your behavior could be interpreted as plagiarism, please contact the
Instructor or the TA before submitting the work!
Lecture notes. Copies of the slides will be provided on Blackboard after each lecture.
The notes are only an outline, and will not contain all of the information presented in the
lecture. For example, the lecture notes might pose a question, but you wont know the
answer if youre not in class to find out. Reading the notes is not an adequate substitute
for attending class!
Accommodation of disabilities. If you need accommodation for a disability, please see
the instructor within the first two weeks of semester.
Accommodation of religious creed. If completing an exam would in some way violate
your religious creed, please see the instructor within the first two weeks of semester.
If you are falling behind: If you run into difficulties of any kind, please come and talk to
me sooner rather than later. If you let me know about any issues as soon as they arise we
can almost always figure something out. If you wait until the end of the term, its much
harder to find a solution.
CONTACTING US
The courses Blackboard site is the primary place you can find course announcements,
lecture slides, and information about assignments. FAQs will be maintained for the
course in general and for each homework assignment.
For specific questions that are not answered on Blackboard, feel free to ask a question
during class, or you can speak to us directly during office hours. You can also e-mail us
to arrange a meeting outside of office hours. You can expect a reply within 72 hours,
something to keep in mind as deadlines approach.
SCHEDULE
The schedule and readings below may change. Please check the course website for
additional readings and for the most recent version of the schedule. All page numbers
refer to the 7th edition of the Anderson textbook.
Wk
1
Day
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
Date
8/28
8/30
9/2
9/4
9/6
9/9
9/11
9/13
9/16
9/18
9/20
9/23
T
Th
Sun
9/25
9/27
9/30
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
T
10/2
10/4
10/7
10/9
10/11
10/16
7
8
Topic
Introduction (p 15)
History of Cognitive Psychology (p 4 12)
COGLAB: Sternberg search, Memory span
Levels of analysis (see website for reading)
Methods for studying cognition / The Brain (p 12 27)
COGLAB: Receptive fields, Levels of processing
Low level vision (p 3242, 61)
High level vision (p 4251, 61)
COGLAB: Spatial cueing, Visual search
Visual attention (p 6981)
Auditory attention (p 6369)
COGLAB: Stroop effect, Mental rotation, Phonological
similarity effect
Central attention (p 8191)
Visual and verbal representations (p 92104)
COGLAB: Partial report, Serial position, Encoding
specificity
Working memory (p 146154)
Episodic memory (p 166172, 196205, 207208)
COGLAB: False memory, Lexical decision
Memory in the real world (p 172174, 192195)
Semantic memory (p 120127, 131136, 142144)
Unit 1 review. Please come with questions or thoughts
that youd like to discuss
Hwk
H1 out
H1 due
H2 out
H2 due
H3 out
H3 due
10
11
12
13
14
15
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
Sun
T
Th
10/16
10/18
10/21
10/23
10/25
10/28
10/30
11/1
11/4
11/6
11/8
11/11
11/13
11/15
T
Th
T
Th
T
11/20
11/22
11/27
11/29
12/4
T
Th
12/4
12/6
H4 out
H4 due
H5 out
H5 due,
H6 out
H6 due