Cognitive Psychology: Week 4
Cognitive Psychology: Week 4
Cognitive Psychology: Week 4
Psychology
WEEK 4
OVERVIEW
• DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
• COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
• Piaget
• Vygotsky
developmental
psychology
WHAT IS DEVELOPMENTAL
PSYCHOLOGY?
Cognitive development
Personality development
ISSUES IN DEVELOPMENTAL
PSYCHOLOGY: NATURE VS. NURTURE
• Yet, there might some instances one is more important than the
other;
• Primary alexithymia; You are born with
• Secondary alexithymia; You develop as you go through
difficulties
ISSUES IN DEVELOPMENTAL
PSYCHOLOGY: NATURE VS. NURTURE
Hardware Software
Biological
Psychological level
level
Neurons
Brain
The brain
THE ORGANIZATION OF THE BRAIN
• Moving from the bottom to the top, functions get more and more
complex:
• the hindbrain
• the midbrain
• the forebrain
DEVELOPMENT OF OUR BRAINAND NERVEOUS
SYSTEM
• The hindbrain execute simpler or automatic physical functions like
reflexes, heartbeat, breathing, sleep.
• The higher levels of the brain perform more complex functions. The
midbrain executes the more complex task of orienting and
movement.
• Finally, a more complex task, such as imagining what your life will
be like 20 years from now, is performed in the forebrain
THE FOREBRAIN
• You could survive if you had only a hindbrain and a midbrain.
• The structures in the hindbrain would take care of basic functions
necessary to sustain life,
• The structures in the midbrain would help you to move your body
and run away from threat
• To understand where the abilities that make us fully human come
from, we need to consider the forebrain.
THE FOREBRAIN
• When the task requires more complex cognition or intellectual skills we
use forebrain.
• The forebrain is the highest level of the brain and controls complex
cognitive, emotional, sensory, and motor functions.
• Reading,
• Detect the sarcasm in a friend’s joke,
• Planning for future,
• Recognize emotions
THE FOREBRAIN
• Thalamus- It acts as a sensory relay station, directing incoming
information from the sense receptors (all the major senses except smell)
• Hypothalamus- eating, drinking, hormones and sexual behaviours. The
hypothalamus is involved maintaining balance (homeostasis)
• Limbic system- involved in motivation and emotion
• The hippocampus- is critical for creating new memories and
integrating them into a network of knowledge.
• The amygdala- plays a central role in many emotional processes,
particularly the formation of emotional memories.
• Cortex- involved in higher processes in the human brain, including
thinking, learning, reasoning and problem-solving
TWO GREAT FEATURES OF OUR BRAIN
• Brain is not a fixed organ that stay stable over a period of time.
• Many aspects of brain can change and adapt to external changes
• The flexibility of our brain or its ability to change is called brain
plasticity.
FUNCTIONS OF BRAIN PLASTICITY
• Replecament
• If you lose your left hand the brain region that represent your left
hand will become unresponsive.
• After some time that brain region will be responsive again and
reassigned to represent another area.
• Blind people
• Representation
• If you use your left hand extensively the brain region that represent
your left hand will get bigger.
• Taxi drivers (who have overdeveloped brain areas that are used
during navigation)
SENSITIVE PERIODS FOR BRAIN PLASTICITY
• There are periods of time where we have the greatest plasticity for
learning new skills; Sensitive periods
• After the sensitive period has passed, plasticity is still possible, but
not as easy.
• Sensitive periods are out best window of time to make changes or
learn new skills
• There's no point where plasticity ends. Plasticity continues throughout
it just gets to be less. It never gets to zero
SENSITIVE PERIOD IN LANGUAGE
• EXERECISE
• Physical exercise can increase the number of synapses and even
promote the development of new neurons. Recent studies with
people have begun to document beneficial effects of cardiovascular
exercise on aspects of brain function and cognitive
• SLEEP
• A number of studies have associated sleep patterns with learning
and memory performance in humans
CAN WE IMPROVE PLASTICITY OF OUR BRAIN?
• PLAY INSTRUMENT
• It stimulates different aspects of cognition by combining motor and
sensory auditory training
• PLAY VIDEO GAMES
• It trains not only complex motor skills, but also complex cognitive
skills. Young adults who played video games for 2 months showed
significant improvements in planning, working memory, and motor
performance
CAN WE IMPROVE PLASTICITY OF OUR BRAIN?
• MAKE ART
• Research from 2015 suggests art forms such as drawing and
painting directly benefit your brain by enhancing creativity and
improving cognitive abilities.
• TRAVEL
• Experiencing something new can also help you learn about different
cultures and become a better communicator, both of which can
have additional cognitive benefits.
KEEP YOUR BRAIN OCCUPIED - USE IT OR LOSE IT
cognitive development
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
Which row
has more
mice?
WHAT CAN NOT KIDS DO IN THE
PREOPERATIONAL STAGE?
• A typical child on Piaget's conservation tasks
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gnArvcWaH6I&ab_channel=munakatay
WHAT CAN KIDS DO IN THE PREOPERATIONAL
STAGE?
Do you have
a Sister? Yes.
• Egocentrism:
unaware of perspectives
other than their own
believe that everyone else
perceives the environment
the same way they do
Does she
• “I am the World.” have a No.
brother?
WHAT CAN NOT KIDS DO IN THE
PREOPERATIONAL STAGE?
• Preoperational children are unaware of perspectives other than their
own believe that everyone else perceives the environment the same
way they do
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RDJ0qJTLohM&ab_channel=Adam
WHAT CAN KIDS DO IN THE PREOPERATIONAL
STAGE?
• Collective monologues or Parallel play
• kids appear to be talking to each other, but they’re really
talking about 2 completely different objects.
• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=20xy4wUgbsc&ab_channel=
Children%27sMuseumHouston
WHAT CAN KIDS DO IN THE PREOPERATIONAL
STAGE?
• animism: canlıcılık
• kids believe that nature is alive & controllable by them or
parents; often believe natural things (trees/rocks) have feelings.
• Children cry if a favourite stuffed animal is kicked, because they
are afraid the animal’s feelings will be hurt
• The chair that falls down and hits the child’s ankle is rude.
3- THE CONCRETE OPERATIONAL STAGE (6-12)
• Kids at this age become more logical about concrete (somut) and
specific things, but they still struggle with abstract ideas (soyut
dusunceler).
• Children also become less egocentric during this stage.
• Display skills of reversibility
• (reversing 3 + 7 = 10 to figure out that 10 - 7 = 3).
3- THE CONCRETE OPERATIONAL STAGE (6-12)
• Can think logically about objects and events Achieves conservation of
number (age 6), mass (age 7), and weight (age 9)
• Classifies objects according to several features and can order them in
series along a single dimension, such as size
4-FORMAL OPERATIONAL STAGE (AGE 12 +)
• Children's thinking becomes much more sophisticated and advanced.
• Kids can think about abstract and theoretical concepts
• Use logic to come up with creative solutions to problems.
Stage Characteristics
Sensorimotor Infant experiences world through movement and senses, develops
(Birth-2 yrs) schemas, begins to act intentionally, and shows evidence of
understanding object permanence.
Preoperational Child acquires motor skills but does not understand conservation of
(2-6 yrs) physical properties. Child begins this stage by thinking egocentrically but
ends with a basic understanding of other minds.
Concrete Child can think logically about physical objects and events and
operational understands conservation of physical properties.
(6-12 yrs)
Formal Child can think logically about abstract propositions and hypotheticals.
operational
(12 yrs and up)
REASSESSMENT OF JEAN PIAGET’S THEORY
SELMA HEKIM
hekimsel@gmail.com