Home
Handbook of Learning and Cognitive Processes (Volume 5): Human Information Processing / Edition 1
Barnes and Noble
Handbook of Learning and Cognitive Processes (Volume 5): Human Information Processing / Edition 1
Current price: $66.99


Barnes and Noble
Handbook of Learning and Cognitive Processes (Volume 5): Human Information Processing / Edition 1
Current price: $66.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
Originally published in 1978 Volume 5 of this
Handbook
reflects a single theoretical orientation, that characterized by the term
human information processing
in the literature at the time, but which ranges over a very broad spectrum of cognitive activities. The first two chapters give some overall picture of the background, goals, method, and limitations of the information-processing approach. The remaining chapters treat in detail some principal areas of application – visual processing, mental chronometry, representation of spatial information in memory, problem solving, and the theory of instruction.
The first three volumes of the
presented an overview of the field, followed by treatments of conditioning, behavior theory, and human learning and retention. With the fourth volume, the focus of attention shifted from the domain of learning theory to that of cognitive psychology.
Handbook
reflects a single theoretical orientation, that characterized by the term
human information processing
in the literature at the time, but which ranges over a very broad spectrum of cognitive activities. The first two chapters give some overall picture of the background, goals, method, and limitations of the information-processing approach. The remaining chapters treat in detail some principal areas of application – visual processing, mental chronometry, representation of spatial information in memory, problem solving, and the theory of instruction.
The first three volumes of the
presented an overview of the field, followed by treatments of conditioning, behavior theory, and human learning and retention. With the fourth volume, the focus of attention shifted from the domain of learning theory to that of cognitive psychology.