Cognitive Psychology
Attachment Styles
Understanding the brain
Neurodivergence
100

What is cognitive psychology? 

the study of how the brain learns 
100

Harry Harlow Monkey Experiment

american psychology professor responsible for developing experiments using primates.

Believed that infants formed attachment with those who provided them with affection rather than physical needs. 

100

Cerebrum

largest, most developed part of the brain. controls memories, understanding and logic. 

Made up of billions of neurons

neuroscientist studies it

100

What is neurodivergence?

means that there are many differences in the way people's brains work. 

200

Bandura's Social Cognitive Theory (Learning theory) 

provide a framework for understanding and changing human behaviour. 

main point: learning takes place by observation, imitation, and modelling. 

TRIADIC RECIPROCAL CAUSATION - behaviour can influence personal factors and vice-versa

200

Mary Ainsworth Attachment findings

Secure attachment- 70%: infant explores environment with caregiver, visibly upset when caregiver leaves

Avoidant attachment- 20%: infants upset when caregiver left, ambivalent when caregiver returns

Resistant attachment- 10%: did not explore very much, whether or not the caregiver was there, show little emotion upon caregivers departure and return

Insecure attachment: often connected to avoidant and resistant, trust is not present in the relationship. NOT PART OF THE ORIGINAL STUDY


200

Perception

Refers to the way sensory information is organized, interpreted, and consciously experienced. 

Ex, 66 or 99

200

When was the term coined? 

In the 1990s to fight stigma and promote acceptance of people with autism. 

300

The BoBo doll experiment

Exposure to aggressive modelling 

300

Bottom-up Processing

perceptions are built from sensory input.

ex. road markings

400

Elizabeth Loftus False Memories

studying false memories and the flexibility and reliability of repressed memories. 

know for the shopping mall experiment:

29% of participants remembered at least part of the false event

25% continuing to remember it in 2 follow up interviews. 

Understanding how false memories are implanted can help psychologists understand how a person can be led to remember something that never happened. 

400

Top-down Processing

how we interpret those sensations is influenced by our available knowledge, our experiences, and our thoughts. 

ex. B or 13 / THE STROOP EFFECT blue pink green 

500

Leta Stetter Hollingworth

one of the first women to debunk men's alleged superiority. 

at the time men claimed women were not fit to work or be educated during their period because they were too unstable. 

Doctors called this "mental illness" for women who became overly emotional- HYSTERIA

Hysteria - Geek word for uterus 

500

Sensory adaptation 

we don't often perceive stimuli that are relatively constant over long periods of time. 

Ex. smell, taste. 

Failure to notice something that is visible because of a lack of attention is called inattentional blindness.