Cognitive Psychology

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1.
Cognitive theory is a field of psychology that focuses on mental processes such as memory perception and .
2.
Memory, perception, attention and decision-making are examples of ___ processes in cognitive theory.
3.
The cognitive paradigm views the mind as an information-processing system, through multiple independent processors. This is called ___.
4.
Because the cognitive methodology uses scientific experiments and numerical data, it is largely ___ in nature.
5.
Reasoning that is emphasised by cognitive psychology.
6.
Chomsky argued that children are born with an innate mental mechanism that allows them to acquire language rapidly. This mechanism is called the ___.
7.
According to Piaget, the stage where language and symbols are used, but logical operations are still absent, is called the ___ stage.
8.
A cognitive process that aids in the transference of working memory to long-term memory.
9.
The awareness of one’s thinking and the capability to implement strategies and alter patterns.
10.
Because cognitive psychology aims to produce objective, testable knowledge using experiments and measurable evidence, its rhetorical structure is strongly influenced by ___.
11.
Reality is experienced through mental representations of the world.
12.
A learning theory in which learning is both an active process and a personal representation of the world.
13.
Treating mind as mere computation, ignoring meaning and embodiment.