Cognitive Psychology CHapter 7: Mental Images and Propositions
functional equivalence hypothesis
although visual imagery is not identical to visual perception, it is functionally equivalent to it.
heuristics
cognitive strategies we use when we use landmark, route-road, and survey knowledge that influence our estimations of distance
spatial cognition
deals with the acquisition, organization, and use of knowledge about actions and objects in 2D and 3D space
declarative knowledge
facts that can be stated-- date of birth, name of best friend, way rabbit looks
cognitive maps
internal representations of our physical environment, particularly centering on spatial relationships
mental rotation
involves rotationally transforming an object's visual mental image. you can hold a water bottle and rotate it in your hands, but also imagine one and rotate the image in your mind.
procedural knowledge
knowledge of procedures that can be implemented, like the steps to tying your shoes, adding a column of numbers, or driving a car
analog codes
mental images. resemble the objects they are presenting.
imagery
mental representation of things that are not currently seen or sensed by the sense organs
propositional theory
suggests we do not store mental representations in the form of images or mere words.
knowledge representation
the form for what you know in your mind about things, ideas, events, and so on, in the outside world
symbolic representation
the relationship between the word and what it represents is simply arbituary-- "cat"
dual-code theory
we use both pictorial and verbal codes for representing info in our minds