Lecture 8 - Cognitive Processes
Lecture 8 - Cognitive Processes
Psychology
Cognitive process
• One of the higher mental processes, such as
perception, memory, language, problem solving,
and abstract thinking.
• The consequence for the speaker: You must try to judge how much
information your audience really needs. Often this judgment will
require you to assess what your listener is likely to know already.
• The consequence for the speaker: When you speak, listeners will
assume that you can back up your assertions with appropriate
evidence. As you plan each utterance, you must have in mind the
evidence on which it is based.
3. Relation: Be relevant.
• The consequence for the speaker: You must make sure that
your listeners will see how what you are saying is relevant
to what has come before. If you wish to shift the topic of
conversation—so that your utterance is not directly relevant
—you must make that clear.
• When you read this sentence, how do you interpret the word bark?
• If you imagine that you have a dictionary in your head, your entry
for bark might look something like this:
• Definition 1. The exterior covering of a tree.
• Definition 2. The sound a dog makes.
c.
c.
b.
a.
d.
b.
c.
a.
a.
a.
c.
b.
d.
a.
a.