Cognitive psychology is radically different from previous psychological approaches in two keys ways.
- It accepts the use of the scientific method, and rejects introspection as valid methods of investigations, unlike phenomenological methods such as Freudian psychology.
- It posits the existence of internal mental states (such as beliefs, desires and motivations) unlike behaviourist psychology.
This way of conceiving mental processes has pervaded psychology more generally over the past few decades, and it is not uncommon to find cognitive theories within social psychology, personality, abnormal psychology, developmental psychology and other areas.
The information processing approach to cognitive functioning is currently being questioned by new approaches in psychology, such as dynamical systems, and the embodiment perspective.
Because of the use of computational metaphors and terminology, cognitive psychology was able to benefit greatly from the flourishing of research in artificial intelligence and other related areas in the 1960s and 1970s. In fact, it developed as one of the significant aspects of the inter-disciplinary subject of cognitive science, which attempts to integrate a range of approaches in research on the mind and mental processes.
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Major Research Areas in Cognitive Psychology
Memory
Knowledge representation
Language
Thinking
Famous Cognitive Psychologists
External Links
