Information processing

MarianieLingapan 9,197 views 26 slides Oct 19, 2016
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About This Presentation

It is about the daily happenings in our brain, the process of information that our senses receives.


Slide Content

Information Processing Presented by: Marianie M. Lingapan

Information Processing (IPT) is a cognitive theoretical framework that focuses on how knowledge enters and is stored in and is retrieved from our memory.

It is one of the most significant cognitive theories in the last century and it has strong implications on the teaching-learning process.

IPT describes how the learner receives information (stimuli) from the environment through the senses and what takes place in between determines whether the information will continue to pass through the sensory

Types Of Knowledge

General vs. Specific – this involves whether the knowledge is useful in many tasks, or only in one. Declarative – this refers to factual knowledge. They relate to the nature of how things are. They may be in a form of a word or an image. Examples are your name, address, a nursery rhyme, the definition of IPT, or even the face of your crush . Types of Knowledge

Procedural – this includes knowledge on how to do things. Examples include making a lesson plan, baking a cake, or getting at least common denominator. Episodic – this includes memories of life events, like your high school graduatio9n. Conditional – this is about “knowing when and why” to apply declarative or procedural strategies. Types of Knowledge

Stages in the Information Processing Theory

The stages of IPT involve the functioning of the senses, sensory-register, short-term memory and long-term memory. Basically, IPT asserts three primary stages in the progression of external information becoming incorporated into the internal cognitive structure of choice (schema, concept, script, frame mental model, etc.).

Three primary stages in IPT Encoding – information is sensed, perceived and attended to. Storage – the information is stored for either as brief or extended period of time, depending upon the process following encoding. Retrieval – the information is brought back at the appropriate time and reactivate for use on a current task, the true measure of effective memory.

What made IPT plausible is the notion that cognitive processes could be described in a stage-like model. The stages to processing follow a trail along which information is taken into the memory system, and brought back (recalled) when needed. Most theories of information processing revolve around the three main stages in the memory process : Sensory Register Executive Control Process Forgetting

Sensory Register

Sensory Register The first step in the IP model holds all sensory information for a very brief time. Capacity : our mind receives a great amount of information but it is more than what our minds can hold or perceive. Duration : the sensory register only holds the information for an extremely brief period – in the order 1 to 3 seconds. There is a difference in duration based on modality : auditory memory is more persistent than visual.

Sensory Register The Role of Attention To bring into consciousness, it is necessary that we give attention to it. Such that, we can only perceive and remember later those things that pass through our attention “gate”. Getting through this attentional filter is done when the learner is interested in the material; when there is conscious control over attention, or when information involves novelty, surprise, salience, and distinctiveness. Before information is perceived, it is known as “pre-categorical” information. This means that until that point, the learner has not established s determination of the categorical membership of the information.

Sensory Register Short-Term Memory (STM or Working Memory) Capacity: the STM can only hold 5 to 9 “chunks” of information, sometimes described as 7 + / - 2. It is called working memory because it is where new information is temporarily placed while it is mentally processed. Duration: around 18 seconds or less. To reduce the loss of information in 18 seconds, you need to do maintenance rehearsal. It is using repetition to keep the information active in STM, like when you repeat a phone number just given over and over.

Sensory Register Long-Term Memory (LTM) The LTM is the final or permanent storing house for memory information. It holds the stored information until needed again. Capacity: LTM has unlimited capacity. Duration: Duration in the LTM is indefinite

Executive Control Processes

Executive Control Processes The executive control processe s involve the executive processor or what is referred to as metacognitive skills. These processes guide the flow of information through the system, help the learner make informed decisions about how to categorize, organize or interpret information. Example processes are attention, rehearsals and organization.

Forgetting

Forgetting Forgetting is the inability to receive or access information when needed. There are two main ways in which forgetting likely occurs: Decay – information is not attended to, and eventually ‘fades’ away. Very prevalent in Working Memory. Interference – New or old information ‘blocks’ access to the information in question.

Forgetting Method for Increasing Retrieval of Information Rehearsal – This is repeating information verbatim, either mentally or aloud. Meaningful Learning – This is making connections between new information and prior knowledge. Organization – It is making connections among various pieces of information. Info that is organized efficiently should be recalled. Elaboration – This is adding additional ideas to new information based on what one already knows. It is connecting new info with old to gain meaning .

Forgetting Method for Increasing Retrieval of Information Visual Imaginar y – This means forming a “picture” of the information Generation – Things we ‘produce’ are easier to remember than things we ‘hear’. Context – Remembering the situation helps recover information. Personalization - It is making the information relevant to the individual.

Forgetting Other Memory Methods Serial Position Effect (recently and primacy) – you will remember the beginning and end of a ‘list’ more readily Part Learning – Break up the ‘list’ or ‘chunk’ information to increase memorization. Distributed Practice – Break up learning sessions, rather than cramming all the info in at once (Massed Practice) Mnemonic Aids – These are memory techniques that learners may employ to help them retain and retrieve information more effectively. This includes the loci techniques, acronyms, among others.

Information is received through the senses and goes to the sensory memory for a very brief amount of time. If not found relevant, information may decay. It goes to the STM and if given attention and is perceived and found to be relevant, it is sent to the LTM. If not properly encoded, forgetting occurs. Different cognitive processes applied to the information will then determine if information can be retrieved when needed later. S u m m a r y