Diagram (cognitive Psychology)

In cognitive Psychology, the diagrams are abstract mental representations which summarize and organize in a way structured of the events, similar objects, situations or experiments. The diagrams, stored in long-term memory, make it possible to analyze, select, structure and interpret new information. They are thus used to some extent as model, of framework (to take again the equivalent expression used in Artificial intelligence) to process the data and to direct the behaviors.

In the model of the control of the action of Norman and Shallice (1980), the diagrams are ground and usual routines of action, automatically carried out starting from internal or environmental indices.

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