Practical Training: Basic Cognitive Psychological Skills
Full course description
This course focuses on the acquisition and training of basic skills required in cognitive performance research. The course is centered around a psychological experiment in which students study the detrimental effects of arousal manipulation (environmental noise) on cognitive processing. Students will learn how to perform a field experiment and will undertake all the various stages that are necessary to acquire and analyze the data and report on the results. Students will be required to recruit a small number of subjects and to administer the test battery according to a pre-defined protocol. The test battery consists of paper and pencil tests that have been presented and discussed in previous courses. After data acquisition, a number of interactive sessions are planned in which students not only learn to explore and analyze their data with SPSS but also learn how to interpret the results. Students conclude the course by writing a journal style paper in APA format describing the experiment. Particular attention will be given to predicting and explaining the results within a theoretical perspective and comparing them with previous findings. An overview of the techniques and tests currently used to evaluate performance in a number of cognitive domains (such as language, perception, attention and executive functions), are also presented to students in this course.
The final assessment for this course is a numerical grade between 0,0 and 10,0.
Course objectives
Students are able to understand:
- psychological testing;
- data preparation;
- data analysis using multivariate techniques;
- report writing.
- L. Kloft - Heller
- M.C. Marzolla