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LECTURE 1: BASIC CONCEPTS IN COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT Dr. Neil H. Schwartz Department of Psychology Psych 353

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Page 1: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

LECTURE 1: BASIC CONCEPTS IN COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

Dr. Neil H. SchwartzDepartment of Psychology

Psych 353

Page 2: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

PRELIMINARY ASSUMPTIONS

Experience is essential in the development of thinking It takes nearly 20 years to develop an adult nervous system Cognition develops quantitatively and qualitatively during the

life-span. That is,

• You don’t just know more but think quite differently over time. • The changes take place by virtue of:

The developmental function- the form cognition takes over time

Individual differences-variations among people at any given developmental period.

Page 3: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

COGNITION: A CONCEPTUAL DESCRIPTION It is what laypersons call thinking.

It is not directly observable, but implied from behavior.

It is real and it exists.

Cognition includes conscious and deliberate acts and non-deliberate processes.

It is comprised of different types of activities.

Page 4: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

THOSE ACTIVITIES CONSIST OF: acquiring, comprehending and modifying information.

developing, executing and evaluating plans. (macro-mechanism)

giving meaning to things we perceive. (micro-mechanism)

forming concepts and classifying stimuli. (micro-mechanism)

Page 5: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

COGNITION: ITS DEVELOPMENT OVER TIME Cognition has structure and function.

Cognition changes in both structure and function over time.

Change is perpetual.

Developmental progression is an interaction of biology and experience.

Developmental progression moves from simple to complex, and incomplete to complete.

Development is an active process.

Page 6: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

STRUCTURERefers to the framework of knowledge that underlies behavior. Ex. knowledge comprised of how to put one leg in front of another to walk or knowledge of how to solve a calculus problem, Or how to program a VCR or set the table for dinner.Cognition organizes this knowledge. It is probably a neural network, and network of networks.

FUNCTION

Refers to what we do with the cognitive system. Perception, memory, reasoning, judgment, problem solving.

Page 7: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

COGNITION: ITS DEVELOPMENT OVER TIME Structure and function of cognition during development

is bi-directional. Environmental stimulation and actions of a structure

itself can change the structure. Changes in structure change the functions. Functions are limited by structures’ capability.

Page 8: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

Function is necessary for development.

Aspects of development are inter-related and integrated.

Development is sequential but not continuous. It is discontinuous.

Children will use a developmental accomplishment over and over once it is acquired.

Page 9: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

Children will give cues to their environment that they are ready to move to the next developmental level.

Children will seek out stimulation in order to develop.

Page 10: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

DEVELOPMENTAL FUNCTION & INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Development is studied in stages and norms.

Important differences do exist between and within individuals.

Page 11: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

FIVE “TRUTHS” OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT Cognitive development proceeds as a result of the

dynamic and reciprocal transaction of internal and external factors;

Cognitive development is constructed within social context

Cognitive development involves both stability and plasticity over time;

Cognitive development involves changes in the way information is represented;

and Children develop increasing intentional control over

their behavior and cognition

Page 12: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

ADAPTIVE CONSTRAINTS

1. Representational – hardwired into brain, such as the nature of objects.

2. Architectural – type and arrangement of neurons limit what information the brain can process, such as language.

3. Chronotopic – neural readiness for different areas is on a timeline.

Page 13: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

EVOLUTION AND COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT Evolutionary theory’s influence on cognitive

development:

Evolutionary psychology provides explanations for both the “how” and “why” questions about human behavior.

Page 14: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

COGNITIVE FLEXIBILITY Stability: degree to which one’s intelligence maintains its

relative rank order compared to one’s peers

Plasticity: degree of flexibility of a cognitive ability

Page 15: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

A DEVELOPMENTAL CONTEXTUAL MODEL

Time

cultureSociety

Community

teachers

classmates

School Network

Social network

Parent peers

Child’s peers

Nonnuclear

family

siblings Parent spouse

Marriage network

Work networkImmediate

job associatesIndirect job associates

child

parent

cognition

personality

Behavior

Demand

shealth

Etc

tempera

ment

Developmentlevel

biology

child

cognition

pers

onal

ity

Behavior

DemandsHealthE

tc

Tempera

ment

Development level

biology

Page 16: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

DYNAMIC SYSTEMS APPROACH Cognitive changes are emergent due to interaction

among characteristics of structure and the environment.

Change is nonlinear.

Systems continually self-organized, transitioning from one stable state to another, known as phase transition.

Page 17: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

DOMAIN-GENERAL VS. DOMAIN-SPECIFIC ABILITIES Both exist

Domain-general: cognition is influenced by one set of factors

Domain-specific: different cognitive domains are controlled by different brain functions or areas of the brain

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CHANGES IN COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

Representation: Children and adults differ in the ways they represent information. Different techniques are particular to each stage of development.

Intentional Control: Children develop strategies to solve problems. Strategies are intentional, goal-directed mental operations designed

to solve a problem

Page 19: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT: CHARACTERISTICS Stages are defined by qualitative differences: changes in

type, often subjectively perceived as different.

There is discontinuity from one stage to the next as different behaviors appear at once.

Homogeneity of cognitive function is seen in stage related functions being done in the same way.

Page 20: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

EVOLUTIONARY PSYCHOLOGY

Cognitive development is contextual

Cognition is shaped by domain-specific brain modules, and as such, function varies by each module.

Page 21: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

Because of domain-specificity, representational, architectural, and chronotopic constraints on cognition, learning becomes more facilitated.

Constraints allow the learner to filter and focus attention on what is important to learn.

Page 23: Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development - …nschwartz/Psy 353 Le… · PPT file · Web view · 2013-09-10Lecture 1: Basic Concepts in Cognitive Development. Dr. Neil

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