This elective course is intended as both an introduction to the
field of cognitive science in general, and an introduction to how
cognitive science potentially illuminates our understanding of
human communication. In the course, cognitive science will be
defined as an interdisciplinary approach to the systematic study of
mind, brain, and behaviour; a field that incorporates a
variety of academic disciplines including philosophy of mind,
cognitive psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and connectionist
neural networks. Communication, on the other hand, will be broadly
defined as the act of transferring information from a sender to a
receiver through the use of some sort of physical medium. The
course will relate cognition and communication in various ways:
cognitive science will be seen as providing an explanation for
how communication is possible, while communication
studies will be seen as providing a concrete and practical
example of cognition operating in an everyday setting.
In the first part of the course, a number of basic distinctions
will be introduced. For example, there are two basic approaches to
investigating cognitive phenomena – theoretical and empirical – and
two basic levels of explanation: the functional level describes the
‘software’ of the mind (its systems and processes), while the
neurobiological level describes the ‘hardware’ of the brain (the
neural structures which underpin those systems and processes).The
fundamental methods associated with different approaches to
understanding the human mind/brain will be discussed.
The second (and main) part of the course will give an overview of
the theories, models, and empirical findings relating
to various cognitive faculties: namely, perception, attention,
memory, language, executive functions, emotion, and consciousness.
Additional topics will include evolutionary theory (how cognitive
mechanisms evolved to cope with the environment of our
hunter-gatherer ancestors), and theories of embodied and embedded
cognition (how cognition potentially involves an interaction
between the brain, the body, and the world).
The third and final part of the course will attempt to summarise
how cognitive science potentially illuminates our understanding of
human communication. This summary will consider the fundamental
distinction between symbolic communication (e.g., language) and
analogical communication (e.g., visual media; facial and bodily
expressions). It will also consider the various theories of how
information is transmitted from a sender to a receiver, or
alternatively, how the information transmitted by the sender is
processed by the receiver (e.g., semiotic-code models versus
cognitive-constructivist models).
|
Primary reading
Eysenck, M. W., & Keane, M. T. (2010). Cognitive
psychology: A student’s handbook (6th Ed.). Hove: Psychology
Press.
Secondary reading: Approaches to human cognition
Churchland, P. (2002). Brain-wise: Studies in
neurophilosophy, Chapter 1, pp. 1-34. Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press.
Secondary reading: Visual perception and attention
Peissig, J. J., & Tarr, M. J. (2007). Visual object
recognition: Do we know more now than we did 20 years ago?
Annual Review of Psychology, 58, 75-96.
McKone, E., Kanwisher, N., & Duchaine, B. C. (2007). Can
generic expertise explain special processing for faces? Trends
in Cognitive Sciences, 11, 8-15.
Bundesen, C., Habekost, T., & Kyllingsbæk, S. (2011). A neural
theory of visual attention and short-term memory (NTVA).
Neuropsychologia, 49, 1446-1457.
Rensink, R. A. (2002). Change detection. Annual Review of
Psychology, 53, 245-277.
Secondary reading: Memory
Baddeley, A. (2003). Working memory: Looking back and looking
forward. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 4, 829-839.
Patterson, K., Nestor, P. J., & Rogers, T. T. (2007). Where do
you know what you know? The representation of semantic knowledge in
the human brain. Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 8, 976-988.
Loftus, E. F. (2003). Make-believe memories. American
Psychologist, 58, 867-873.
Secondary reading: Executive functions
Anderson, J. R., Fincham, J. M., Qin, Y., & Stocco, A. (2008).
A central circuit of the mind. Trends in Cognitive
Sciences, 14, 136-143.
Todd, P. M., & Gigerenzer, G. (2007). Environments that make us
smart: Ecological rationality. Current Directions in
Psychological Science, 16, 167-171.
Evans, J. St. B. T. (2008). Dual-processing accounts of reasoning,
judgment, and social cognition. Annual Review of
Psychology, 59, 255-278.
Secondary reading: Emotion
Frijda, N. H. (1988). The laws of emotion. American
Psychologist, 43, 349-358.
Phelps, E. A. (2006). Emotion and cognition: Insights from studies
of the amygdala. Annual Review of Psychology, 57, 27-53.
Secondary reading: Consciousness
Baars, B. J., & Franklin, S. (2007). An architectural model of
conscious and unconscious brain functions: Global Workspace Theory
and IDA. Neural Networks, 20, 955-961.
Block, N. (2005). Two neural correlates of consciousness.
Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 9,
46-52.
|