Cognitive Psychology (CP)

Your constantly-updated definition of Cognitive Psychology (CP) and collection of videos and articles
308 shares

What is Cognitive Psychology (CP)?

Cognitive psychology is a specific field within psychology that studies mental processes such as perception, memory, problem-solving, emotions and learning.

To study such phenomena, cognitive psychology applies mathematical models to analyze data, experimental research models to observe behaviors, and statistics.

Cognitive psychology principles are combined with cognitive modeling as a way of creating the best possible interfaces. Researchers try to predict user behavior and then design around inherent and anticipated limitations, in order to create an interface that is efficient and intuitive for the users to maneuver and interact with.

Literature on Cognitive Psychology (CP)

Here’s the entire UX literature on Cognitive Psychology (CP) by the Interaction Design Foundation, collated in one place:

Learn more about Cognitive Psychology (CP)

Take a deep dive into Cognitive Psychology (CP) with our course The Brain and Technology: Brain Science in Interface Design .

How do you know if your next computer system, app or website will be a success? Well, if you look at all major technological advances in the last few decades, you’ll see that it heavily depends on whether it works well with people. Developments such as email, smartphones, and social networks have all involved some form of human-to-computer interaction and interface. The critical success factor for modern technology has therefore become not what it does but how it interacts with people. For example, can you even imagine life without your smartphone these days? Technology has interwoven itself not only into the human psyche but also quite literally—handheld devices can now be seen attached to peoples’ palms in virtually any setting.

When people use technology, a biological information processor (i.e., the brain) interacts with a mechanical information processor (i.e., the computer)—and this interaction will fail if there is no common ground. If you, as a designer, miss the mark between these two worlds of natural and artificial intelligence, they will collide jarringly. This course will therefore merge brain science and computer science in order to teach you the field of Human-Computer Interaction (HCI). You will learn optimal approaches to designing better software, mobile applications, and websites, including online communities, by learning how to create software that interacts with human intuitions. Such knowledge of HCI is now a critical skill—building new hardware and software goods will result in negative returns on investment (ROI) if users can’t or don’t want to use them. Designers must know the basics of brain science in order to practice computer science, not only for people but for communities, too.

The course is created and presented by Brian Whitworth, a registered psychologist who is also trained in computing and has a wealth of experience and qualifications in both fields: BA (Psych), BSc (Maths), MA (Psych), PhD (IS), and Major (Retd.). Each lesson highlights a particular brain-technology difference and uses it to explain what works—and what doesn’t—when people use technology. Every lesson is further divided into ten-minute video blocks, that you can watch independently, so as to fit your learning experience into a busy schedule.

All open-source articles on Cognitive Psychology (CP)

Please check the value and try again.

Open Access—Link to us!

We believe in Open Access and the democratization of knowledge. Unfortunately, world-class educational materials such as this page are normally hidden behind paywalls or in expensive textbooks.

If you want this to change, , link to us, or join us to help us democratize design knowledge!