hidden pixel

Cognitive Information

Cognition is the scientific term for mental processes. It refers to information-processing abilities of humans, including perception, learning, remembering, judging, and problem-solving. Cognition is studied in various disciplines such as psychology, philosophy, linguistics, and computer science. Usage of the term varies in different disciplines; for example in psychology and cognitive science, it usually refers to an information processing view of an individual's psychological functions. It is also used in a branch of social psychology called social cognition to explain attitudes, attribution and groups dynamics.

The term cognition (Latin: cognoscere, "to know", "to conceptualize" or "to recognize") refers to a faculty for the processing of information, applying knowledge, and changing preferences. Cognition, or cognitive processes, can be natural or artificial, conscious or unconscious. These processes are analyzed from different perspectives within different contexts, notably in the fields of linguistics, anesthesia, neurology and psychiatry, psychology, philosophy, anthropology, systemics, computer science and creed. Within psychology or philosophy, the concept of cognition is closely related to abstract concepts such as mind, intelligence, cognition is used to refer to the mental functions, mental processes (thoughts) and states of intelligent entities (humans, human organizations, highly autonomous machines and artificial intelligences).

Contents

Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development

For years, sociologists and psychologists have conducted studies on Cognitive Development or the construction of human thought or mental processes.

Jean Piaget was one of the more important and influential people in the field of Developmental Psychology. He believed that humans are unique in comparison to animals because we have the ability to do "abstract symbolic reasoning." His work can be compared to Lev Vygotsky, Sigmund Freud, and Erik Erikson who were also great contributors in the field of Developmental Psychology.

Piaget's theory of Developmental Psychology tackled cognitive development from infancy to adulthood.

Stage Age or Period Description
Sensorimotor stage Infancy Intelligence is present; motor activity but no symbols; knowledge is developing yet limited; knowledge is based on experiences/ interactions; mobility allows child to learn new things; some language skills are developed at the end of this stage
Pre-operational stage Toddler and Early Childhood Symbols or language skills are present; memory and imagination are developed; nonreversable and nonlogical thinking; egocentric thinking predominates
Concrete operational stage Elementary and Early Adolescence Logical and systematic form of intelligence; manipulation of symbols related to concrete objects; operational thinking predominates nonreversable and egocentric thinking
Formal operational stage Adolescence and Adulthood Logical use of symbols related to abstract concepts; egocentric thinking comes back early in this stage; formal thinking is uncommon

Psychology

When the mind makes a generalization such as the concept of tree, it extracts similarities from numerous examples; the simplification enables higher-level thinking.

The sort of mental processes described as cognitive are largely influenced by research which has successfully used this paradigm in the past, likely starting with Thomas Aquinas, who divided the study of behavior into two broad categories: cognitive (how we know the world), and affective (feelings and emotions). Consequently, this description tends to apply to processes such as memory, association, concept formation, pattern recognition, language, attention, perception, action, problem solving and mental imagery.[1][2] Traditionally, emotion was not thought of as a cognitive process. This division is now regarded as largely artificial, and much research is currently being undertaken to examine the cognitive psychology of emotion; research also includes one's awareness of their own strategies and methods of cognition called metacognition and includes metamemory.

Empirical research into cognition is usually scientific and quantitative, or involves creating models to describe or explain certain behaviors.

While few people would deny that cognitive processes are a function of the brain, a cognitive theory will not necessarily make reference to the brain or other biological process (compare neurocognitive). It may purely describe behavior in terms of information flow or function. Relatively recent fields of study such as cognitive science and neuropsychology aim to bridge this gap, using cognitive paradigms to understand how the brain implements these information-processing functions (see also cognitive neuroscience), or how pure information-processing systems (e.g., computers) can simulate cognition (see also artificial intelligence). The branch of psychology that studies brain injury to infer normal cognitive function is called cognitive neuropsychology. The links of cognition to evolutionary demands are studied through the investigation of animal cognition. And conversely, evolutionary-based perspectives can inform hypotheses about cognitive functional systems evolutionary psychology.

The theoretical school of thought derived from the cognitive approach is often called cognitivism.

The phenomenal success of the cognitive approach can be seen by its current dominance as the core model in contemporary psychology (usurping behaviorism in the late 1950s). Cognition is severely damaged in dementia.

Cognition as social process

It has been observed since antiquity that language acquisition in human children fails to emerge unless the children are exposed to language. Thus, language acquisition is an example of an emergent behavior. In this case, the individual is made up of a set of mechanisms "expecting" such input from the social world.

Education has the explicit task in society of developing student cognition. Choices are made regarding the environment and permitted action that lead to a formed experience. The macro-choices made by the teachers are extremely influential on the micro-choices made by students. For example, face perception in human babies emerges by the age of two months and so young children at a playground or swimming pool begin their social cognition by being exposed to multiple faces and associating the experiences to those faces.

From a large systemic perspective, cognition is considered closely related to the social and human organization functioning and constrains. Managerial decision making processes can be erroneous in politics, economy and industry for the reason of different reciprocally dependent socio-cognitive factors. This domain became the field of interest of emergent socio-cognitive engineering.

See also

In addition to the topics below, see the List of thinking-related topics
Wikibooks has a book on the topic of Cognitive psychology
Wikiversity has learning materials about Cognition

Wikipedia portals

References

  1. ^ Sensation & Perception, 5th ed. 1999, Coren, Ward & Enns, p. 9
  2. ^ Cognitive Psychology, 5th ed. 1999, Best, John B., p. 15-17

Further reading

External links

Look up cognition in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
· · Philosophy of mind
Philosophers of mind J. L. Austin · Alexander Bain · Henri Bergson · Krishna Chandra Bhattacharya · Ned Block · C. D. Broad · Daniel Dennett · Dharmakirti · Donald Davidson · René Descartes · Alvin Goldman · Martin Heidegger · Edmund Husserl · William James · Søren Kierkegaard · Gottfried Leibniz · Maurice Merleau-Ponty · Marvin Minsky · G. E. Moore · Thomas Nagel · Karl Popper · Richard Rorty · Gilbert Ryle · John Searle · Baruch Spinoza · Alan Turing · Vasubandhu · Ludwig Wittgenstein · Zhuangzi · more…
Theories of mind Behaviourism · Biological naturalism · Dualism · Eliminative materialism · Emergent materialism · Epiphenomenalism · Functionalism · Identity theory · Interactionism · Materialism · Mind-body problem · Monism · Naïve realism · Neutral monism · Phenomenalism · Phenomenology (Existential phenomenology) · Physicalism · Pragmatism · Property dualism · Representational theory of mind · Solipsism · Substance dualism
Concepts in mind Abstract object · Artificial intelligence · Chinese room · Cognition · Concept · Concept and object · Consciousness · Idea · Identity · Ingenuity · Intelligence · Intentionality · Introspection · Intuition · Language of thought · Materialism · Mental event · Mental image · Mental process · Mental property · Mental representation · Mind · Mind-body dichotomy · Pain · Problem of other minds · Propositional attitude · Qualia · Tabula rasa · Understanding · more…
Related articles Metaphysics · Philosophy of artificial intelligence · Philosophy of information · Philosophy of perception · Philosophy of self
Portal · Category · Task Force · Discussion
· · Mental processes
Cognition Awareness · Cognitive dissonance · Comprehension · Consciousness · Imagination · Intuition
Perception Amodal perception · Color perception · Depth perception · Visual perception · Form perception · Haptic perception · Speech perception · Perception as Interpretation · Numeric Value of Perception · Pitch perception · Harmonic perception · Social perception
Memory Encoding · Storage · Recall · Memory consolidation
Other Attention · Higher nervous activity · Intention · Learning (Memory) · Mental fatigue · Set (psychology) · Thinking · Volition

Categories: Cognition | Cognitive science | Psychology | Mental processes

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue Nov 22 23:15:32 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.


cognitive taxonomy circle jpg
blogs.inghamisd.org
cognitive taxonomy circle jpg
715px x 698px | 86.40kB

[source page]

Comment away and let me know I m aiming to take the circle live the week of August 11 If I end up doing this in flash it may be the first week in September but it will be created Share This

Google Images Search: cognitive,
Tue Jan 3 12:35:02 2012
Age And Heart Failure Linked To Reduction In Verbal Memory
Medical News Today
Age And Heart Failure Linked To Reduction In Verbal Memory
Tue, 09 Aug 2011 09:03:11 -0700

According to background information of the article, researchers began studying the association of heart failure with cognitive decline 30 years ago and discovered that thirty to eighty percent of patients with heart failure may experience some ...
Google News Search: cognitive,
Tue Jan 3 12:35:02 2012
Cognitive Bias Modification
kosmix.com
Cognitive Bias Modification
Cognitive-bias modification (CBM) appears to be effective after only a few 15- minute sessions, and involves neither drugs nor the discussion ...
www.kosmix.com/topic/cognitive+bias+modification

Web Search: "cognitive",
Tue Jan 3 12:35:04 2012

Adjective

cognitive (comparative more cognitive, superlative most cognitive)
  1. The part of mental functions that deals with logic, as opposed to affective which deals with emotions.
Related terms
from: Wiktionary: cognitive,
Wed Jan 18 05:16:32 2012