what cognitive neuroscience can do for english professors

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What Cognitive Neuroscience Can Do for English Professors Amanda Preston, MA English & Developmental English Professor, Eastfield College Applied Cognition & Neuroscience Graduate Student, UT Dallas

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Page 1: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

What Cognitive Neuroscience Can Do for English ProfessorsAmanda Preston, MAEnglish & Developmental English Professor, Eastfield CollegeApplied Cognition & Neuroscience Graduate Student, UT Dallas

Page 2: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Brain & Behavioral Science: A Brief Address

▪ How and where language processing works in the brain

▪ Language development & higher cognitive functions

▪ Memory and attention systems

▪ Problem solving mental confusion

▪ Analogical priming—teaching versus telling

Page 3: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Language Processing in the Brain

e.g. Wernicke, 1886; Broca, 1861; Zaidel, 1978; Rasmussen & Milner, 1977

Broca’s AreaWernicke’s Area

Left Lateralization

Page 4: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Current Research: Right Hemisphere Recruitment

Noppeney et al., 2005; Christodoulou et al.,2013

Hemispherectomy studies:

Implications for revised learning strategies with adult learners and dyslexics.

Page 5: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Developmental Differences

Bunge, S.A. & Wright, S.B. (2007)

Problem solvingLanguage

Page 6: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Active Learning Systems: Memory & Attention

Thomson, R.F. & Kim, J.J., 1996

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Growth Factor: Confusion & Arborization

Hebbian Learning describes an increase in connectivity among neurons. This arborization occurs through repeated activation. The more frequently those neural patterns fire, the more the neural architecture changes: new dendritic branches, new synapses.

Page 8: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Analogical Reasoning: Self-directed Learning

Figure 3. Group-averaged activations for contrasts of interest are displayed. (A) Coronal slices through a canonical brain display regions activated by analogy and semantic trials relative to fixation. Areas of overlap between the two contrast maps appear yellow. (B) Shown here on a rendered canonical brain are regions activated to a greater extent by analogy relative to semantic trials, by low relative to high Associative Strength trials, and by unrelated- relative to related-analogy trials. (Bunge et al., 2005)

Page 9: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Classroom Implementation StrategiesFrom theoretical models to instructional practice

Page 10: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #1

Instructions:

–30 seconds to study the image–Do not write anything down

–Count backwards from 98 by sevens

–Write down all the items you recall

There will be a quiz!

Page 11: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors
Page 12: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #1

Instructions:

–Count backwards from 98 by sevens

–Once you reach zero, write down everything you remember

How well do you know the text?

Page 13: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #1

A few simple comprehension questions after a first read of the text:

▪ How many windows are there?

▪ What animal is in the room?

▪ What color are the flowers on the table?

▪ Where do you think this house is? (what’s outside?)

▪ How many lamps are in the room?

▪ What shape is the window on the back kitchen wall?

▪ What color is the fireplace?

Page 14: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

The Living Room

▪ Cognitive Models– False memories– Focus of attention– Task Switching Cost– STM v. LTM

▪ Pedagogical Foci– Description– Attention to details– (re) Reading a text– Test-taking strategies

Page 15: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #2

Instructions:

–Observe the image closely–Count the number of triangles–You many write on the sheet provided

–You have to be able to show how you found each triangle

–You will have three minutes

Page 16: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

How many trianglesare there in thisimage?

Page 17: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #2.2

Instructions: try it again in groups

–Write down the number of triangles in the image

–Use the second sheet provided if necessary

–All group members must be able to show how to find all counted triangles—be able to prove it!

–You will have three minutes

Page 18: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Did you find more the second read?

Did group dialogue help you discover more and better understand the text?Imagine how much more can be found with an expert’s strategy: employing research & resources

Page 19: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

The Triangle

▪ Cognitive Models– Focus of attention– Working memory– Semantic comprehension

▪ Pedagogical Foci– Close reading– Iterative reading– Multiple perspectives– Teaching as learning– Dialogue as discovery

Page 20: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #3

Instructions:

–This is a competition. (against?)–Only the group that gets the most correct receives

a prize– I will only give instructions once: all questions

thereafter will be answered with the same question

–Consider the story being told: Why this story & right now?

–You will have five minutes to complete the task

Page 21: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

“The Parable of the Onion”a revised version from Dostoevsky’s The Brothers Karamazov

Listen closely!

Page 22: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

“Parable of the Onion”

▪ Cognitive Models– Analogical priming– Higher cognitive reasoning– Associative thinking– Spreading activation

▪ Pedagogical Foci– Concept generalization– Logical inference– Social responsibility– Interpretive analysis– Dialogue as discovery

Page 23: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #4

Instructions:

–Assess your knowledge: “confidence level”▪ Rate from 1 (no confidence) to 10 (certainty)

–Describe & define in detail what a zipper is & how it works as if you are tasked with explaining it for an encyclopedia

–You have three minutes

Page 24: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

How accurateis your explanation?

Actual

Assumed Knowledge

Page 25: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

The Zipper Illusion

▪ Cognitive Models– Illusion of Explanatory

Depth– Semantic retrieval– LTM Encoding

▪ Pedagogical Foci– Personal responsibility– Critical thinking – Communicative clarity– Re-description as discovery– Definitional analysis

Markman, 2012

Page 26: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #5

Instructions:

–Left side of the room: close your eyes (no peeking)

–Right side of the room▪ Only write down what the slide asks you to evaluate▪ Do not write the list items down

–You will have ~30 seconds to memorize the list items

Page 27: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Write “yes” or “no” to indicate which words have the letter e

▪ Folder

▪ Quiet

▪ Alligator

▪ Pencil

▪ Treasure

▪ Motivation

▪ Clue

▪ Sailboat Craik & Tulving, 1975

▪ Freeze

▪ Tailor

▪ Veranda

▪ Web

▪ Sauce

▪ Cookie

▪ Mission

▪ Banana

Page 28: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #5

Instructions:

Write down as many items

as you can remember

Page 29: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #5

Instructions:

–Right side of the room: close your eyes (no peeking)

–Left side of the room▪ Only write down what the slide asks you to evaluate▪ Do not write the list items down

–You will have ~30 seconds to memorize the list items

Page 30: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Write whether you “like” or “dislike” each item

▪ Folder

▪ Quiet

▪ Alligator

▪ Pencil

▪ Treasure

▪ Motivation

▪ Clue

▪ Sailboat

▪ Freeze

▪ Tailor

▪ Veranda

▪ Web

▪ Sauce

▪ Cookie

▪ Mission

▪ Banana Craik & Tulving, 1975

Page 31: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #5

Instructions:

Write down as many items

as you can remember

Page 32: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Thought Experiment #5

How many words do you remember?

Did the right side of the room recall more items?

Page 33: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

The Baker-baker Paradox

Foer, 2012

Page 34: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Baker-baker Paradox

▪ Cognitive Models– Working memory– Lexical retrieval– Cognitive interference– Depth of processing– Semantic comprehension

▪ Pedagogical Foci– Mnemonics– Test taking strategies– Reading comprehension– Name (static) v. verb (active)

Page 35: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Other Brain & Behavioral Informed Strategies

Rule of Threes (Markman, 2012)

End Summaries (Markman, 2012)

Testing Eff ects (Godden & Baddeley, 1975; Reodriger & Karpicke, 2006a & 2006b)

Transfer Appropriate Processing (Morris et al., 1977)

Spreading Activation Theory (Collins & Loftus, 1975)

Expanding Retrieval (Landauer,T. K. & Bjork, R. A. , 1978)

Page 36: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

Take Away: Employ Experimentation

Much research already exists about how separate brain systems/modules operate. To benefit, we need to know it.

▪ Doing so means that by staying informed, reading about findings, and identifying models that predictably describe optimal cognitive function in learning and memory, teachers can turn experiment methods from studies into types of lesson plans & activities.

By doing this, there is more overlap between what we know works and what we need students to know. Let the science work for you.

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Questions?Contact information: [email protected]: http://thepoetsglass.com

Twitter: @thepoetsglass Facebook: Ms.Amanda.Preston

Page 38: What cognitive neuroscience can do for English professors

References

Bunge, S.A. & Wright, S.B. (2007) Neurodevelopmental changes in working memory and cognitive control. Current Opinion in Neurobiology, 17(2): 243-50.

Bunge S.A., Wendelken C., Badre D., Wagner A.D. (2005) Analogical reasoning and prefrontal cortex: evidence for separable retrieval and integration mechanisms. Cereb Cortex. 2005 Mar;15(3):239-49. Epub 2004 Jul 6.

Christodoulou, J.A. “The Neuroscience of Reading: Using Research to Understand Reading Development and Difficulties.” Focused, Organized Minds: Using Brain Science to Engage Attention in a Distracted World. Fall Conference: Boston, Nov. 2014. Learning & the Brain Society.

Christodoulou, J.A., Walker, L.M., Del Tufo, S.N., Katzir, T., Gabrieli, J.D.E., Whitfield-Gabrieli, S., & Chang, B.S. (2012) Abnormal structural and functional connectivity in gray matter heterotopia. Epilepsia, 53(6): 1024-32.

Collins, Allan M.; Loftus, Elizabeth F., "A spreading-activation theory of semantic processing", Psychological Review. 1975 Nov Vol 82(6) 407-428.

Craik, Fergus I. M.& Tulving, Endel (1975). "Depth of processing and the retention of words in episodic memory" (PDF). Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 104 (3): 268–294. doi:10.1037/0096-3445.104.3.268.

Foerde, K., Race, E., Verfaellie, M., & Shohamy, D. (2013) A Role for the Medial Temporal Lobe in Feedback-Driven Learning: Evidence from Amnesia. The Journal for Neuroscience, 33(13): 5698-704.

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References

Gabrieli, J.D.E., Christodoulou, J.A., O’Loughlin, T., & Eddy, M. (2010) The reading brain. In D. Sousa (Ed.), Mind, Brain, and Education: Neuroscience implications for the classroom. Bloomington, IN; Solution Tree Press.

Godden, D; Baddeley, A. (1975). "Context dependent memory in two natural environments". British Journal of Psychology 66 (3): 325–331. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8295.1975.tb01468.x

Markman, A. (2012) Smart Thinking. London, England: Perigee Book.

Thomson, R.F. & Kim, J.J. (1996) A tentative taxonomy of long-term memory and associated brain structures. Memory systems in the brain and localization of a memory. Epub. PNASUSA 93(24).

Morris, C. D.; Bransford, J. D.; Franks, J. J. (1977). "Levels of processing versus transfer appropriate processing". Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior 16: 519–533. doi:10.1016/s0022-5371(77)80016-9

Roediger, H. L., & Karpicke, J. D. (2006a). The power of testing memory: Basic research and implications for educational practice. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 1, 181–210.

Roediger, H. L., & Karpicke, J. D. (2006b). Test-enhanced learning: Taking memory tests improves long-term retention. Psychological Science, 17, 249–55.

Landauer, T. K., & Bjork, R. A. (1978). Optimum rehearsal patterns and name learning. In M. M. Gruneberg, P. E. Morris, & R. N. Sykes (Eds.), Practical aspects of memory, 625–632). London: Academic Press.