Studying at the University of Verona
Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.
Type D and Type F activities
This information is intended exclusively for students already enrolled in this course.If you are a new student interested in enrolling, you can find information about the course of study on the course page:
Laurea magistrale in Psicologia per la formazione - Enrollment from 2025/2026I 9 crediti liberi a scelta dello studente (ambito “D”) hanno lo scopo di offrire allo studente la possibilità di personalizzare il proprio percorso formativo permettendo di approfondire uno o più argomenti di particolare interesse legati al proprio percorso accademico.
Per garantire questo fine, si invitano gli studenti a rispettare le seguenti indicazioni per il completamento di tale ambito:
- almeno un’attività formativa erogata come esame universitario (con relativo voto in trentesimi) selezionato tra le attività del proprio piano non seguite in precedenza o fra gli insegnamenti dei CdLM del Dipartimento di Scienze Umane;
- massimo 6 cfu relativi a competenze linguistiche (oltre a quelli previsti dal PdS);
- massimo 6 cfu relativi a competenze informatiche (oltre a quelli previsti dal PdS);
- massimo 4 cfu di tirocinio, (oltre a quelli previsti dal PdS);
- massimo 6 cfu di attività laboratoriale/esercitazioni (compresi quelli previsti nei PdS per l’ambito) di regola viene riconosciuto 1 cfu ogni 25 ore di attività;
- massimo 6 cfu di attività seminariale/convegni/cicli di incontri/formative in genere (sia accreditata dal Dipartimento di Scienze Umane che extrauniversitaria) – di regola viene riconosciuto 1 cfu ogni 8 ore di partecipazione e/o 2 giornate salvo diversamente deliberato;
- non vengono valutate attività svolte in Erasmus non inserite nei Learning Agreement.
Altre informazioni sono reperibili nella Guida per i crediti liberi che è possibile trovare quì.
COMPETENZE TRASVERSALI
Scopri i percorsi formativi promossi dal Teaching and learning centre dell'Ateneo, destinati agli studenti iscritti ai corsi di laurea, volti alla promozione delle competenze trasversali:
https://talc.univr.it/it/competenze-trasversali
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | Learning and communication in educational settings: planning of interventions | D |
Daniela Raccanello
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | EXPOSED BODIES - Diotima seminar | D |
Rosanna Cima
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Human Resources Functions (2022/2023) | D |
Andrea Ceschi
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Interventi di comunita': tecniche per la risoluzione relazionale dei conflitti | D |
Anna Maria Meneghini
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Neuropsychology Laboratory | D |
Valentina Moro
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | The individual and organizational assessment : a guide to the main psychological tests | D |
Barbara Giacominelli Gasbarro
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Being and well-being in the workplace: promoting organizational well-being starting from the prevention of psychosocial risks. | D |
Riccardo Sartori
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Summer school: human sciences and society - (HSAS) – 2022/2023 | D |
Federica De Cordova
(Coordinator)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | Business English for everybody | D |
Manuel Boschiero
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Russian for everybody | D |
Maria Gabriella Landuzzi
(Coordinator)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | APsyM workshop on quantitative data analysis | D |
Margherita Brondino
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Work and Organizational Psychology (WOP) focus groups | D |
Riccardo Sartori
(Coordinator)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | Interventi e tecniche per lo sviluppo di comunita' | D |
Anna Maria Meneghini
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | APsyM workshop on quantitative data analysis | D |
Margherita Brondino
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Mindfulness and nature. Feeling better at work. Nature-based mindfulness practices for coping with stress in the workplace | D |
Margherita Pasini
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | University and DSA: Methods and strategies for studying and studying at university | D |
Ivan Traina
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | Work and Organizational Psychology (WOP) focus groups | D |
Riccardo Sartori
(Coordinator)
|
years | Modules | TAF | Teacher |
---|---|---|---|
1° 2° | Ethics in psychology | D |
Elena Trifiletti
(Coordinator)
|
1° 2° | The Talks of EThoS Research Centre | D |
Carlo Chiurco
(Coordinator)
|
Thinking and Reasoning (2022/2023)
Teaching code
4S007368
Teacher
Coordinator
Credits
6
Language
Italian
Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)
M-PSI/01 - GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY
Period
Sem. 2A dal Feb 13, 2023 al Mar 30, 2023.
Learning objectives
This course will cover the main contemporary theories of human thinking and reasoning, including perceptual processes, logical and analogical reasoning, and probabilistic reasoning. In addition, it will cover classic research on cognitive bias and decision making, the mental model theory, as well as heuristics and theories and models on the automatic vs reflexive functions of thought activity. By the end of the course students will be able to: - understand the historical framework, in which theories and experimental researches concerning psychology of thinking and reasoning has been developed, also developing a deep comprehension of the psychological constructs in the field, - develop knowledge and comprehension of the terms relating to Decision Making and Problem Solving.
Prerequisites and basic notions
No prior knowledge required
Program
- Automatic mind vs serial mind
- System 1 vs System 2
- Interactions between system 1 and system 2
- Interactions: seeing vs knowing
- Interactions: the search for a compromise
- Cognitive effort and mental laziness
- Cognitive effort and mydriasis
- More on cognitive effort
- Optimal cognitive effort
- Cognitive effort and self-control
- The depletion of the self
- Depletion of the ego and blood glucose
- The lazy system 2
- Relationship between intelligence, control and rationality
- The associative mechanism (of system 1)
- The priming effect
- The ideomotor priming effect
- The reversed ideomotor priming effect
- Priming and stimuli
- The Lady Macbeth effect
- Cognitive fluency
- Cognitive fluidity, memory illusions and déjà vu
- Illusions of truth
- How to be persuasive
- Tension and cognitive effort
- The pleasure of cognitive fluency
- The exposure effect
- Creativity, fluency, mood and intuition
- Surprise and normality
- Communication and normality
- Causality and intention
- Jump to intuitive conclusions and mistakes
- Jump to conclusions, context and recency
- Belief bias
- Confirmation bias
- Bias "halo effect"
- WYSIATI: What You See Is All There Is
- WYSIATI and judgment and choice bias
- How are judgments formed?
- Basic evaluations (series and prototypes)
- Intensity matching
- The "mental smack"
- Heuristic substitution of questions
- 3D heuristics
- Heuristics of mood and happiness
- Heuristics of affection
- The difficult relationship between the mind and statistics
- Variability
- The law of small numbers
- The bias of certainty with respect to doubt
- Cause and case
- Cause, case and cognitive illusions
- Anchoring effect
- Anchoring effect as adjustment and as priming
- The anchor index
- Reasonableness / randomness of the anchor
- Anchoring and arbitrary rationing
- Anchoring and threats
- Estimate the frequency of a category
- Availability heuristics
- Availability heuristics, emotion and risk
- Audience vs experts
- Cascade of availability
- The risk assessment
- The evaluation of probability
- A priori probability and heuristics of representativeness
- The ambiguities of the heuristic of representativeness
- Representativeness heuristics and system 2
- Disciplining intuition to Bayesian logic
- Heuristics vs logic: less is more
- Fallacy of the conjunction
- Persuasive vs probable
- Single evaluation vs joint evaluation
- Probability, money and joint evaluation
- Probability vs frequency
- The causes beat the statistics
- Random stereotypes
- Statistical and random a priori probabilities
- Do you teach more "from general to particular" or "from particular to general"?
- Regression towards the average
- Understanding regression
- Regressive considerations
- Correct intuitive predictions
- Non-regressive intuitions
- A test for the correction of intuitive predictions
- Excessive security: the illusion of understanding
- The hindsight and past states of knowledge
- The hindsight bias and the result bias
- The recipes of success and halo effect
- The illusion of validity
- The illusion of skill
- The illusion of the gurus
- Insights against formulas
- Multiple vs unweighted regression
- Hostility (of clinicians) towards algorithms
- The man-machine moral issue
- How to make good predictions: build a simple algorithm
- Expert intuition, intuition as recognition
- Acquire competence
- Doubts about expert intuition
- Expert intuition vs algorithms
- Regularities easily or hardly discovered: the role of feedback
- Evaluate the validity of an intuition
- Internal vs external vision
- The fallacy of planning
- The optimistic bias
- Excessive security
- The positivity of optimism
- The "pre-mortem" method
- Choices and theories
- The theory of utility learned
- The position of Bernoulli
- The theory of the prospect
- Bernoulli's mistake
- Aversion to loss
- The blind spots of prospect theory
- The reference point
- Dotation effect
- Negative events
- The asymmetric intensity of the motivations
- Subjective reference and aversion to loss
- Weights and probabilities
- Change the odds
- Possibility effect and certainty effect
- We are willing to pay for uncertainty
- Decision-making weights
- The 4-cell scheme
- Rare events
- Overestimation and overweight
- Vibrance of representation
- Carelessness for the denominator
- The power of the format
- Framing
- The tilt effect
- Inclination and fallacy effect of sunk costs
- The regret
- Blame
- Emotions, regret and guilt
- The importance of contrasting alternatives
- The inversions of preference
- Categories of judgment and intensity matching
- Framing effect
- Good and bad frames
- Experience and memory
- Happy ending and coincidences
- Well-being
Bibliography
Didactic methods
Frontal teaching. Video recordings of the lectures will be made available in the Panopto box in the elearning/moodle section of the course.
Learning assessment procedures
The examination taken during an official call will consist of a written test with thirty multiple-choice questions to be taken in 30 minutes (3 answer alternatives of which only one is correct).
Evaluation criteria
For the purposes of the final grade expressed in thirtieths, a correct answer has a value of 1 point, an incorrect answer has a value of 0 points, an answer not given has a value of 0 points).
Criteria for the composition of the final grade
For the purposes of the final grade expressed in thirtieths, a correct answer has a value of 1 point, an incorrect answer has a value of 0 points, an answer not given has a value of 0 points).
Exam language
Italiano