Succeed in the course with COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY IN AND OUT OF THE LABORATORY! This understandable cognitive psychology textbook provides you with the tools you need to master the concepts and improve your performance on exams. With everyday examples, the author presents brain function - an abstract and difficult topic - in a clear and manageable way. Key terms, review questions, CogLab exercises, and Web resources give you many new ways to approach the topics covered in the text. Through hands-on practice and reinforcement, you'll learn both the importance and personal relevance of understanding brain function.
I do not like the growing "casual" (ie dumbed down) trend of university textbooks. I don't want to hear about your students' projects, or your dogs! Call me old fashioned, but I like definitions, sidebars, histories... you know, textbook content. Not to mention ACADEMIC content.
This was definitely a good read overall. The author broke down different topics and explained cognitive psychology very well. However, sometimes I did find myself getting confused by the language used to describe certain concepts. Mind you, some of these theories were very abstract and difficult to explain anyways, but I had to mainly rely on my professor's PowerPoints to understand the concepts. But, I think this was still a good read for bringing all the concepts together and it worked as a good review after I had learned about the content in class!
Kind of hard to understand, but also dumbed down fairly well. Some parts are easier than others to read. I may just be on the slower end of the intellectual spectrum.
Not bad at all for a textbook. The writing is lively and engaging and the examples and studies that illustrate the material are well chosen and carefully explained. If I knew nothing of cognitive psychology, this book would have been a key component in the foundations of HCI course material. However, it turns out that I already know quite a bit about the subject through reading of Steven Pinker, Daniel Kahneman, Daniel M. Wegner, Daniel C. Dennett, Robert Kurzban, Sam Harris, and others. So, to be honest, I was a bit put off by the somewhat introductory tone of the book, but in fact I definitely learned some things about psychological concepts and approaches that had not been directly dealt with in my reading of the more popularized writing by the authors mentioned above.
Nothing special. Fairly wordy and awkward sentences sometimes. Decent for a textbook. Not so great for a cognition book. They should be aware of how detrimental syntactical grammar, story grammar, and BORING issues can affect a person's reading, attention, memory, etc. Oh hey, maybe I did learn something.