Cognitive revolution

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The "cognitive revolution" is the name for an intellectual movement in the 1950s that began what are known collectively as the cognitive sciences. It began in the modern context of greater interdisciplinary communication and research. The relevant areas of interchange were the combination of psychology, anthropology and linguistics with approaches developed within the then-nascent fields of artificial intelligence, computer science and neuroscience.

The cognitive revolution in psychology was a response to behaviorism, which was the predominant school in experimental psychology at the time. This school was heavily influenced by Ivan Pavlov, B.F. Skinner, and other physiologists. They proposed that psychology could only become an objective science were it based on observable behavior in test subjects. Because mental events are not publicly observable, Behaviorist psychologists avoided description of mental processes or the mind in their literature.

The field of cognitive psychology developed as a response to this approach to psychology. One of its main ideas was that by studying and developing successful functions in artificial intelligence and computer science, it becomes possible to make testable inferences about human mental processes. This has been called the reverse-engineering approach.

This account of the "cognitive revolution" was challenged by Jerome Bruner who characterized it as

"“an all-out effort to establish meaning as the central concept of psychology […]. It was not a revolution against behaviorism with the aim of transforming behaviorism into a better way of pursuing psychology by adding a little mentalism to it. […] Its aim was to discover and to describe formally the meanings that human beings created out of their encounters with the world, and then to propose hypotheses about what meaning-making processes were implicated." (Bruner, 1990, Acts of Meaning, p. 2)

The cognitive approach was brought to prominence by Donald Broadbent's book Perception and Communication in 1958. The publication of the book Cognitive Psychology by Ulric Neisser in 1967 is also considered an important milestone. Other influential researchers included Noam Chomsky, Herbert Simon and Allen Newell. The cognitive revolution reached its height in the 1980s with publications by philosophers such as Daniel Dennett and artificial intelligence experts like Douglas Hofstadter.

Proponents of the movement often cite Chomskian linguistics as an impetus for behaviorism's falling from popular favor. It should be noted, though, that the term "behaviorism" is an umbrella term that encompasses multiple approaches towards behavior. At the time the revolution occurred, the popular "behaviorism" was Kenneth Spence and Clark Hull's Stimulus-Response psychology. Radical behaviorists continued to hold to Skinner's behaviorist model of language acquisition, which some have argued was not adequately refuted by Chomsky's anti-behaviorist arguments (MacCorquodale 1970).

The rejection of mental states by the behaviorists was based on a philosophical concept known as Occam's Razor. It states that a theory should make the fewest assumptions possible while still accounting for known data. Radical behaviorists argue that data can be accounted for by using observable phenomena and that there is no need to assume a "mental" world exists at a metaphysical level (see parsimony). Cognitive psychologists argued in response that experimental investigation of mental states do allow scientists to produce theories that more reliably predict outcomes. Modern neuroimaging technology has made it possible to observe brain states, but how these correspond to mental structures is still a challenge.

By the early 1980s the cognitive approach had become the dominant research line of inquiry in many of the (applied) psychology research fields.

[edit] Five major ideas from the cognitive revolution

Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker identified "five ideas from the cognitive revolution that have revamped how we think and talk about minds" in his book The Blank Slate


  • The mental world can be grounded in the physical world by the concepts of information, computation, and feedback. [1]
  • The mind cannot be a blank slate because blank slates don't do anything. [2]
  • An infinite range of behavior can be generated by finite combinatorial programs in the mind [3]
  • Universal mental mechanisms can underlie superficial variation across culture [4]
  • The mind is a complex system composed of many interacting parts. [5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Steven Pinker, The Blank State, page 31. 2002, published by the Penguin Group
  2. ^ Steven Pinker, The Blank State, page 34. 2002, published by the Penguin Group
  3. ^ Steven Pinker, The Blank State, page 36. 2002, published by the Penguin Group
  4. ^ Steven Pinker, The Blank State, page 3. 2002, published by the Penguin Group
  5. ^ Steven Pinker, The Blank State, page 39. 2002, published by the Penguin Group

7

  • Bruner (1990) Acts of Meaning.
  • Chomsky (1959). A Review of B. F. Skinner's Verbal Behavior. Language 35(1):pp. 26–58.
  • Skinner, B. F. (1989). Review of Hull's Principles of Behavior. Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 51, 287–290
  • Ken MacCorquodale's Response to Chomsky's Review of Verbal Behavior [1]