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History of Psychology. Chapter 15 Cognitive Psychology & Psychology in the 21 st Century. Cognitive Movement in Psychology. The founding of cognitive psychology 1. no single founder
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History of Psychology Chapter 15 Cognitive Psychology & Psychology in the 21st Century
Cognitive Movement in Psychology • The founding of cognitive psychology • 1. no single founder • 2. Their position in opposition to the behaviorist and could not or would not give a definition for what they were really doing or supporting. • 3. two scholars contributed groundbreaking work • a. George Miller • b. Ulric Neisser
A. His life 1. majored in speech and English 2. as a graduate student, taught 16 sections of introductory psychology 3. 1941: master’s in speech from U. of Alabama II. George Miller (1920 - )
George Miller (1920 - ) • 4. 1946: Ph.D. from Harvard, began studying psycholinguistics • 5. 1951:Language and Communication • 6. behaviorism • a. Miller accepted it as the primary school (had no choice)
George Miller (1920 - ) • B. The Center for Cognitive Studies • 1. purpose: to investigate the human mind • 2. defined by what it was not in behaviorism • 3. cognitive psychology is a return to commonsense psychology • 4. wide range of topics of interest
A. His life 1. born in Kiel, Germany; moved to the U.S. at age 3 2. at Harvard: a physics major, switched to psychology 3. influenced by Miller, and Koffka’s Principles of Gestalt Psychology(1935) Ulric Neisser (1928 - )
Ulric Neisser (1928 - ) • 4. 1950: bachelor’s from Harvard • 5. master’s at Swarthmore with Köhler • 6. 1956: Ph.D. from Harvard • 7. behaviorist (he had no choice)
Ulric Neisser (1928 - ) • 8. first position at Brandeis, with Maslow as department head • a. opportunity to pursue his interest in cognitive psychology • b. claimed cognitive psychology is the Third Force • 9. 1967: Cognitive Psychology • a. a personal book, an attempt to define the kind of psychologist he wanted to be. • b. this book was a landmark in the history of psychology
Ulric Neisser (1928 - ) • 10. 1976: Cognition and Reality • a. dissatisfied with • 1) the narrowing of the cognitive position • 2) the reliance on artificial laboratory situations for data instead of real-world settings • b. concluded: cognitive psychology had little to contribute to understanding how people cope • 11. became an outspoken critic and challenging the movement.
III. Psychology in the 21 century • A. Cognitive Neuroscience • Study: how brain functions give rise to mental activity and to correlate specific aspects of information processing with specific brain regions. • EEG (Electroencephalogram) • MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imagery) • PET (Positron Emission Tomography) • CAT (Computerized Axial Tomography) Increasing the precision and detail to observe brain activities.
III. Psychology in the 21 century • B. Evolutionary Psychology • C. Health Psychology • enhance physical health • D. Cognitive Science • Human-computer interactions
III. Psychology in the 21 century • E. Multi-cultural and cross-cultural issues in psychology • Multiculturalism as a fourth force • F. The technology of psychological testing • G. Prescription privileges for Psychologists • H. Reluctance to managed care