Cognitive Psychology: Mind and Brain
Cognitive Psychology: Mind and Brain Books
Product Description
This book is the first to incorporate neuroscience seamlessly into the study of cognitive psychology. The study of cognition has progressed enormously over the past decade, but no now available book summarizes and makes accessible the key findings and theories. This book takes a fresh look at the field, and presents it as it really is today. By integrating findings about the brain into the usual fare for this topic, it provides the foundation for readers to study current research in the field. How the Brain Gives Rise to the Mind; Perception; Attention; Representation and Knowledge in Long-Term Memory; Encoding and Retrieval from Long-Term Memory; Working Memory; Executive Processes; Emotion and Cognition; Choice Making; Problem Solving and Reasoning; Plotting and Motor Cognition; and Language. For those involved in the field of cognitive psychology.
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I waited and waited and waited some more… a month has passed, and alas- no package arrived!
I contacted the sellers for no aim! It’slike they don’t even exist!
Do not order from this so-called sellers! It’s a total waste of your time!
Amazon were kind enough to return my money, but the time I wasted coming up for the book cannot be returned!
Rating: 1 / 5
This has been a excellent book. Well, the looks of it anyway. The pages were very nice, not a mark on the pages. The terrible boy who owned this book smokes and the book had a stale smoke smell. The smell left after awhile so no problem. All is excellent for me as long as you buy it back.
Catherine Soto
Rating: 4 / 5
This is an brilliant book that has a different perspective on Cognitive Psychology. This has a Psychologist’s perspective. It is a fantastic read for the money it expenditure. The book was in groundbreaking new conditionand it had been well-packed. What was even better was Amazon.com’s prompt delivery… I got it on the day I was traveling abroad and so I may possibly read it on the flight.
Rating: 5 / 5
Eighteen leading scientists, led by Smith and Kosslyn, have reconstructed the foundations of cognitive psychology in an innovative, current, readable, vital, factually right textbook. First and foremost, they weave recent neuroscientific discoveries into the discussion, without abandoning a primary focus on cognitive psychology. Their sophisticated framework integrates mental and neural levels of analysis, without confusing mind and brain, or structure and function.
Until now, most cognitive psychology texts have tended to follow the organizational format of Broadbent’s (1958) classic, Perception and Communication. Broadbent (1984) wrote, “Since those innocent days, the world has become more complex, so that it is trying to top to a single summary of the same entire area… One widespread view, which I support, is that the framework of the 1958 book now requires shifting to a different kind of simplistic conceptual framework.”
In the current text, the authors’ framework for discussing memory is unorthodox. They include two chapters on long-term memory followed (not preceded!) by a chapter on working memory. Several unusual chapters include Executive Processes (Chapter 7), Emotions and Cognition (Chapter 8), and Motor Cognition and Mental Simulation (Chapter 11).
One fantastic strength of this text is that it is well written. Kosslyn and others have a tendency to be very fascinating in their other publications, so this may not be surprising. Moreover, this book seems to have benefited from aggressive editing for style and clarity. I’m betting that motivated undergraduate students will delight in this book.
Another fantastic strength of this text is in the selection of the authors who wrote it. They are experts in their respective fields, able to bestow the material simply and clearly without the loss of accuracy that can attend scientific writing for a general audience. Many of these authors are what you might call Rennaissance scholars, with a wide range of professional interests.
Here are the chapter contents, by the side of with primary authors: (1) How the Brain Gives Rise to the Mind (Kosslyn), (2) Perception (Seiffert, Wolfe & Tong), (3) Attention (Behrmann & Geng), (4) Representation and Knowledge in Long-Term Memory (Barsalou), (5) Encoding and Retrieval from Long-Term Memory (Wagner), (6) Working Memory (More courageous), (7) Executive Processes (Smith), (8) Emotion and Cognition (Phelps), (9) Choice Making (Hastie & Sanfey), (10) Problem Solving and Reasoning (Dunbar & Fugelsang), (11) Motor Cognition and Mental Simulation (Decety & Sommerville), and (12) Language (MacDonald).
The first chapter (Kosslyn) provides a small history (remarkably small), and then sets the tone for the rest of the book with sections on “Understanding the Mind: The Form Theories of Cognition”, “The Cognitive Brain”, and “Studying Cognition.” Moreover, it presents a classic debate on (surprise, surprise) the nature of mental descriptions. I suppose that it is not too surprising that the book starts by covering these sorts of topics. Even so, I reckon that this chapter, by THIS author, is very vital. Kosslyn has, over the years, been exceptionally careful about how he makes inferences about the brain and mind (e.g., “carving a system at its joints”). Others at the cold edge have not been so careful or insightful. The combination of meticulous thought and cold-edge enthusiasm make for some excellent stuff. I reckon the first chapter is a huge plus. {Video resources featuring Kosslyn/mental descriptions include the Learning Psychology DVD and a free online Quicktime video from the Edge – Third Culture website. “What Shape are a German Shepherd’s Ears?”)
The second chapter (Seiffert, Wolfe & Tong) is a fine introduction to basic issues in perception. My sense is that the authors strove to be concise and clear, rather than to break new ground in the presentation of topics. The chapter provides a excellent survey of perception, which is not everlastingly the case with cognitive psychology textbooks. Wolfe just wrote/edited a remarkably excellent textbook on Sensation and Perception (Sinauer). I urge that you take a look at the text and the textbook’s (free, brilliant) website.
My reaction to the third chapter on attention (Behrmann & Geng) was similar to my reaction to the second. Again, I urge taking a look at Wolfe’s Sensation and Perception textbook, as its chapter on visual attention covers many of the same topics and includes gorgeous illustrations.
The eighth chapter (Phelps) was remarkable for its concise treatment of basic issues, as well as its up-to-date treatment of the cognitive neuroscience of emotions. (See Phelps on the Learning Psychology DVD, by the way). I teach a graduate course on the Cognitive and Affective bases of Behavior at AIU, and I’ve been looking for something like this chapter. I suppose there may be other chapters in other books that accomplish similar things, but I haven’t found them. I was surprised by some omissions, e.g., I looked for references to Izard (e.g., challenges to Ekman), Plutchik (circumplex develop), and Damasio (emotions, brain, consciousness). But the chapter provides the intro to emotions and cognition that many cognitive psychologists need.
The ninth chapter (Hastie & Sanfey) provides an intro to basic JDM issues, including a comprehensible intro to prospect theory. (A excellent video – see Kahneman’s Nobel Prize address, available online at the Nobel Prize website). The chapter seems to break new ground (for a cog psy text) when it focuses on the neural bases of judgement and choice making. (Hastie has done some remarkable work with juries, legal issues, and medical choice making; a small of this has found its way into the chapter). Compared to other chapters on the same topic, this one seems to de-emphasize the work of Tversky and Kahneman to some extent, in act of kindness of contributions by other authors.
(I hope to write reviews of other chapters as time permits.)
The book seems to target upper division students and graduate students. It is too advanced for a lower division class. A excellent, basic text for lower division students is Reed’s Cognitive Psyhology. I would describe Reed’s text as a purist’s introduction. It doesn’t deviate from the classic study of cognition per se, so you won’t find much cognitive neuroscience embedded in chapters. Rather, it tends to emphasize the applications of cognitive psychology.
I judge the Smith/Kosslyn book may possibly be improved in a number of ways. First, there does not seem to be a student and instructor website for this text. These sorts of sites can be extremely helpful because they provide additional visual material, Powerpoint presentations, sample questions, and more. An unorthodox book like this one needs a website with supporting materials. Instructors will appreciate anything that makes transition to the new text simpler. (If you are an instructor and want to pool resources, please contact me. I might urge purchasing Zimbardo’s Learning Psychology DVDs, as they feature some authors and topics that are covered in this book).
The book itself has some brilliant illustrations. Even so, I tend to prefer books that have even more illustrations. A recent textbook on another topic by Wolfe et al. (Sensation and Perception, Sinauer) is my current gold standard, in part because there are brilliant, colorful illustrations on near every page. In my own teaching, I find that texts that provide a constant spill of powerful images are the most well loved with students. May possibly additional images be included at a course website, and then added to the text later, when new editions are released? Kosslyn, with all his knowledge of descriptions and graph-making, may possibly turbo-payment this text with artwork if so inclined.
There are some topics that were neglected in this book. One huge area includes learning. As it stands, a few cognitive textbooks (e.g., Medin et al.) address learning. Others seem satisfied to relegate learning to the behaviorists, and their tired and right approaches (“tired” not “tried”). I reckon a chapter on learning, from a cognitivist’s perspective, would be an brilliant addition to this book. There is some discussion of classical, operant, and vicarious learning in the chapter on emotion, but nothing about learning per se. Additionally, there are only a few sentences on sensory memory. Sperling’s classic study is mentioned in passing, but this and other vital experiments were not described). I suppose that it is impossible to do everything.
The authors and publisher make a strong claim: “This book is the first to incorporate neuroscience seamlessly into the study of cognitive psychology.” Perhaps. I would say that this book is “seamless” to the extent that it includes in rank about the brain in each chapter. There are other brilliant Cognitive Psychology textbooks, and most of these include reasonable in rank about cognitive neuroscience. See, e.g., the texts of Sternberg, Reisberg, Anderson, Medin et al., or Goldstein. The selling top of the current text, IMHO, is that the current crop of authors are first-rate contributors to our understanding of cognition and the brain. And these authors have chosen to report sexy, new findings that are at the forefront of our field.
In summary, I am enthusiastic about using this book in my future Cognitive Psychology classes. This is the modern cognitive psychology textbook that needed to be written. The authors have focused on what they plotting was most vital for students rather than on what most other textbooks have done. They bestow fresh material in a new way without abandoning many essential, classic topics.
Rating: 5 / 5