Information Processing 2
Information Processing 2
Information Processing 2
Basic Assumptions
The information processing approach is based on a number of assumptions,
including:
(1) information made available by the environment is processed by a series of
processing systems (e.g. attention, perception, short-term memory);
(2) these processing systems transform or alter the information in systematic ways;
(3) the aim of research is to specify the processes and structures that underlie
cognitive performance;
(4) information processing in humans resembles that in computers.
Critical Evaluation
A number of models of attention within the Information Processing framework
have been proposed including:
Broadbent's Filter Model (1958), Treisman's Attenuation Model (1964) and
Deutsch and Deutsch's Late Selection Model (1963).
However, there are a number of evaluative points to bear in mind when studying
these models, and the information processing approach in general. These
include: