Course |
Course Outcomes |
Learning and teaching strategies |
Assessment Strategies |
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Course Code |
Course Title |
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24DPSY511(B) |
Cognitive Psychology (Theory) |
On completion of this course, the students will be able to: CO111: Interpret and appraise the historical development and subsequent approaches to cognitive psychology. CO112: Appreciate the complexity of attention and perception as a cognitive process and its applications. CO113: Judge the impact of memory systems and structures as proposed within the cognitive psychology perspectives on emotions. CO114: Appreciate the complexity in reasoning, judgements and decision making in everyday life. CO115: Examining the field of psycholinguistics and nuances of language acquisition CO116: Contribute effectively in course-specific interactions |
Approach in teaching: Interactive Lectures, Discussion, Tutorials, Reading assignments, Demonstration, Team teaching Learning activities for the students: Self-learning assignments, Effective questions, Simulation, Seminar presentation, Giving tasks, Field practical, Solving problems in tutorials. |
Class test, Semester end examinations, Quiz, Assignments, Presentation, Individual and group projects |
History of Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Renaissance, Current Status: Computer Model and Cognitive Neuroscience.
Approaches: Information Processing, Ecological, Connectionist and Evolution Perspective.
Processing Capacity and Selective Attention, Model of Selective Attention, Capacity Model of Attention.
Theories of Perception, Perceptual Learning and Development, Signal Detection Theory.
Sensory, Short Term and Long-Term Memory, Working Memory, Semantic and Episodic, Eyewitness, Implicit vs Explicit; Models of Semantic Knowledge, The Procedural – Declarative Distinction. Emotion and Attention & Perception
Dimensional Approaches, Theoretical Approaches; Mood and Memory, Emotional Learning, Emotion and Declarative Memory,
Concept Formation, Logic, Reasoning-Deductive & Inductive, Judgments: Based on memory, Similarity, Estimates. Decision Making: Nature, Decision Tree, Approaches: Expected Utility and Prospect Theory. Decision Making in the Real World.
Structure of Language, Field of Linguistics, Syntactic Formalisms, Relation between Language and Thought, Language Acquisition, Psycholinguistics, Lexical-Decision task, Comprehension, Top-down, Bottom up, Model of Text Comprehension.
Suggested Readings
E-Resources: